Ann A. Reilley
United States Department of Agriculture
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Featured researches published by Ann A. Reilley.
Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2009
Christopher M. Richards; Gayle M. Volk; Ann A. Reilley; Adam D. Henk; Dale R. Lockwood; Patrick A. Reeves; Philip L. Forsline
Malus sieversii (Lebed.) M. Roem. is a wild progenitor species of the domesticated apple. It is found across a mountainous region of central Asia and has been the focus of several collection expeditions by the USDA-ARS-National Plant Germplasm System. This study used microsatellite variation at seven loci to estimate diversity and differentiation within M. sieversii using several complimentary approaches. Multilocus genotypes were amplified from 949 individuals representing seedling trees from 88 half-sib families from eight M. sieversii populations collected in Kazakhstan. Apportioning of genetic variation was estimated at both the family and site level. Analyses using a hierarchical model to estimate Fst showed that differentiation among individual families is more than three times greater than differentiation among sites. In addition, average gene diversity and allelic richness varied significantly among sites. A rendering of a genetic network among all sites showed that differentiation is largely congruent with geographical location. In addition, nonhierarchical Bayesian assignment methods were used to infer genetic clusters across the collection area. We detected four genetic clusters in the data set. The quality of these assignments was evaluated over multiple Markov Chain Monte Carlo runs using both posterior likelihood and stability of the assignments. The spatial pattern of genetic assignments among the eight collection sites shows two broadly distributed and two narrowly distributed clusters. These data indicate that the southwestern collection sites are more admixed and more diverse than the northern sites.
Conservation Genetics | 2004
Christopher M. Richards; Ann A. Reilley; Darren H. Touchell; Michael F. Antolin; Christina Walters
Seed collections in gene banks are useful for the preservation of wild germplasm, providing inexpensive insurance for species that survive in conventional cold storage (−18 °C). Seeds that cannot survive these conditions must be pretreated with cryoprotectants and stored at liquid nitrogen temperatures, which presents unique technical and methodological challenges. Implicit in this approach is the assumption that these added manipulations do not change the genetic diversity of the preserved collections. We used polymorphic microsatellite markers for an endangered aquatic grass, Texas wild rice (Zizania texana), to conduct a preliminary evaluation of the effects of cryogenic preservation of mature embryos on genetic diversity. Using several statistical approaches, we show that allele frequencies did not change in collections of seeds that underwent cryopreservation (cryoprotected) compared to those samples that was not exposed to cryopreservation (control). The retention of the allelic diversity at the five loci examined suggests that there were no significant changes in genetic diversity due to treatments and that these protocols may be appropriate for ex situ conservation of genetically diverse wild germplasm.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Imke Thormann; Patrick A. Reeves; Ann A. Reilley; Johannes M. M. Engels; U. Lohwasser; A. Börner; Klaus Pillen; Christopher M. Richards
Informed collecting, conservation, monitoring and utilization of genetic diversity requires knowledge of the distribution and structure of the variation occurring in a species. Hordeum vulgare subsp. spontaneum (K. Koch) Thell., a primary wild relative of barley, is an important source of genetic diversity for barley improvement and co-occurs with the domesticate within the center of origin. We studied the current distribution of genetic diversity and population structure in H. vulgare subsp. spontaneum in Jordan and investigated whether it is correlated with either spatial or climatic variation inferred from publically available climate layers commonly used in conservation and ecogeographical studies. The genetic structure of 32 populations collected in 2012 was analyzed with 37 SSRs. Three distinct genetic clusters were identified. Populations were characterized by admixture and high allelic richness, and genetic diversity was concentrated in the northern part of the study area. Genetic structure, spatial location and climate were not correlated. This may point out a limitation in using large scale climatic data layers to predict genetic diversity, especially as it is applied to regional genetic resources collections in H. vulgare subsp. spontaneum.
Plant Genetic Resources | 2017
Imke Thormann; Patrick A. Reeves; S. Thumm; Ann A. Reilley; Johannes M. M. Engels; C. M. Biradar; U. Lohwasser; A. Börner; Klaus Pillen; Christopher M. Richards
In many regions of the world, the cultivation of landraces is still common, in particular in centres of crop diversity. Significant effort has been put into ex situ conservation of landraces but limited data exist on the changes in genetic diversity that occur over time in farmers’ fields. We assessed temporal changes in barley landrace diversity in Jordan using seed samples collected in 1981 and 2012 from the same locations. We did not observe significant changes in the amount of genetic diversity, but samples collected in 2012 were more homogenous and less locally distinct. In two sites, we observed replacement of the old material. We observed a change in phenotype, and phenotypes were found to be more homogeneous among sites in 2012. Climate changed significantly over the study period, becoming hotter and dryer, but we did not identify any correlation between the changes in climate and genetic and phenotypic variations. While the amount of genetic diversity in terms of allelic richness and number of multi-locus genotypes has been maintained, local distinctiveness among landrace barley populations in Jordan was reduced.
American Journal of Botany | 2017
Luke R. Tembrock; Mark P. Simmons; Christopher M. Richards; Patrick A. Reeves; Ann A. Reilley; Manuel Curto; Harald Meimberg; Grace Ngugi; Sebsebe Demissew; Abdul Wali Al Khulaidi; Mansoor Al-Thobhani; Sheron Simpson; Daniel Martin Varisco
PREMISE OF THE STUDY Qat (Catha edulis, Celastraceae) is a woody plant species cultivated for its stimulant alkaloids. Qat is important to the economy and culture in large regions of Ethiopia, Kenya, and Yemen. Despite the importance of this species, the wild origins and dispersal of cultivars have only been described in often contradictory historical documents. We examined the wild origins, human-mediated dispersal, and genetic divergence of cultivated qat compared to wild qat. METHODS We sampled 17 SSR markers and 1561 wild and cultivated individuals across the historical areas of qat cultivation. KEY RESULTS On the basis of genetic structure inferred using Bayesian and nonparametric methods, two centers of origin in Kenya and one in Ethiopia were found for cultivated qat. The centers of origin in Ethiopia and northeast of Mt. Kenya are the primary sources of cultivated qat genotypes. Qat cultivated in Yemen is derived from Ethiopian genotypes rather than Yemeni wild populations. Cultivated qat with a wild Kenyan origin has not spread to Ethiopia or Yemen, whereas a small minority of qat cultivated in Kenya originated in Ethiopia. Hybrid genotypes with both Ethiopian and Kenyan parentage are present in northern Kenya. CONCLUSIONS Ethiopian cultivars have diverged from their wild relatives, whereas Kenyan qat has diverged less. This pattern of divergence could be caused by the extinction of the wild-source qat populations in Ethiopia due to deforestation, undersampling, and/or artificial selection for agronomically important traits.
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2005
Gayle M. Volk; Christopher M. Richards; Ann A. Reilley; Adam D. Henk; Philip L. Forsline; Herb S. Aldwinckle
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2006
Gayle M. Volk; Christopher M. Richards; Adam D. Henk; Ann A. Reilley; Nahla V. Bassil; Joseph D. Postman
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2009
Christopher M. Richards; Gayle M. Volk; Patrick A. Reeves; Ann A. Reilley; Adam D. Henk; Philip L. Forsline; Herb S. Aldwinckle
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2008
Gayle M. Volk; Christopher M. Richards; Ann A. Reilley; Adam D. Henk; Patrick A. Reeves; Philip L. Forsline; Herb S. Aldwinckle
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2009
Gayle M. Volk; Christopher M. Richards; Adam D. Henk; Ann A. Reilley; Patrick A. Reeves; Philip L. Forsline; Herb S. Aldwinckle