Andreas von tiedemann 2 , Rod J. Snowdon 1 & christian obermeier 1* Although copy number variation (CNV) and presence-absence variation (PAV) have been discovered in selected gene families in most crop species, the global prevalence of these polymorphisms in most complex genomes is still unclear and their influence on quantitatively inherited agronomic traits is still largely unknown. Here we analyze the association of gene PAV with resistance of oilseed rape (Brassica napus) against the important fungal pathogen Verticillium longisporum, as an example for a complex, quantitative disease resistance in the strongly rearranged genome of a recent allopolyploid crop species. Using Single Nucleotide absence Polymorphism (SNaP) markers to efficiently trace PAV in breeding populations, we significantly increased the resolution of loci influencing V. longisporum resistance in biparental and multi-parental mapping populations. Gene PAV, assayed by resequencing mapping parents, was observed in 23-51% of the genes within confidence intervals of quantitative trait loci (QTL) for V. longisporum resistance, and high-priority candidate genes identified within QTL were all affected by PAV. The results demonstrate the prominent role of gene PAV in determining agronomic traits, suggesting that this important class of polymorphism should be exploited more systematically in future plant breeding. Duplication of genes followed by diversification is a common process shaping the evolution of plant species by natural and artificial (breeding) selection 1. Genes can be duplicated by different mechanisms, including tandem duplication, transposon-mediated duplication, segmental duplication, or in the most extreme form by whole-genome duplication (WGD) or polyploidization. WGD is common in the evolutionary history of many wild and cultivated plant species. Different terms have been used frequently to describe short-and long-range genomic duplication and genome structural variation (SV), a term originally defined in reference to insertions, deletions and inversions greater than 1 kb in size 2-4. In contrast to small-scale insertion-deletion (InDel) polymorphisms, which are generally defined as small insertions or deletions of a few nucleotides (up to 50 bp), SV in the size range of genes (up to a few kb) can give rise to copy number variation (CNV) or presence/absence variation (PAV). The latter is an extreme form of CNV where fragments in the size range of genes are missing from the genomes of some investigated genotypes. Genes affected by duplications, InDels, CNVs and PAVs in diploid and polyploid plant species have been linked to local adaptation of wild populations 5 and to important agronomical traits in crops 1,3,6-8 for example flowering time and vernalization requirement in oilseed rape 9,10 and wheat 11 , abiotic stress tolerance in wheat 12,13 and biotic stress tolerance in tobacco 14. However, the strong impact of CNV and other forms of SV in polyploid crop genomes on evolution and trait selection was not recognized until the las...