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GENETIC VARIABILITY FOR REDUCING SUGAR CONTENT IN WILD POTATOES THAT OCURR IN SOUTHERN BRAZIL

Reducing sugar and dry matter are very important traits in potatoes for processing. Two wild potato species, Solanum commersonii, subspecies commersonii and malmeanum, and S. chacoense, subspecie mu, occur in the South of Brazil. These species are important for breeding programs, since they have variability for several important traits, such as drought and frost resistance, disease and insect resistance, and dry matter content.. The objectives of this research were to verify the genetic variability for reducing sugar content in wild potato clones of species that occur in this region and to estimate its heritability. Fifty wild potato clones, aleatorily chosen, of Embrapa Clima Temperado collection were grown in screen house, in autumn and spring season of 1996. In autumn, 30 and, in spring, 40 clones produced tubers for the reducing sugar analysis. Tuber sugar content was determined by using the Lane Enyon method and identified by the Somogyi method, modified by NELSON (1944). The results indicated that these species have genetic variability for reducing sugars, with high heritability, mainly in the fall season.

Solanum commersonii; S. chacoense; heritability


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