Nuclear DNA content and karyotype of Rosewood (Aniba rosaeodora)

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Abstract

Rosewood (Aniba rosaeodora Ducke, Lauraceae) is ecologically and economically important to the Amazon region. As a consequence of its economic importance, rosewood populations have been decimated in the Amazon forest. Species of nine genera of the Lauraceae family have characterized karyotypes with n = × = 12 chromosomes in the gametophytic phase but the genus Aniba is one of the least studied Lauraceae genera with a previously undescribed genome. We used cytogenetic techniques to determine that the A. rosaeodora karyotype contained 12 pairs (2n=24) of relatively small submetacentric chromosomes with lengths ranging from 1.34 to 2.25 μm and a nucleolar organizer region (NOR) in the short arm of chromosome 7. Flow cytometry gave 2C=2.32 pg of DNA, equivalent to approximately 2.24 × 109 base pairs. Copyright by the Brazilian Society of Genetics.

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Contim, L. A. S., de Carvalho, C. R., Martins, F. A., & de Freitas, D. V. (2005). Nuclear DNA content and karyotype of Rosewood (Aniba rosaeodora). Genetics and Molecular Biology, 28(4), 754–757. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1415-47572005000500017

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