Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution

Sorghum [Sorghumbicolor (L.) Moench] is a very important crop in the Sudan serving as a primary source of food, beverage, and total livelihood for millions of people in the country. The crop originated in the Northeast quadrant of Africa, and the Sudan is widely recognized as a major center of diversity. Although Sudanese sorghum germplasm has been assembled and stored over the last 50 years, careful analysis of this valuable germplasm has not been made. The objectives of this study were to assess phenotypic diversity and compare pattern of distribution among Sudanese sorghum landraces collected from different geographical regions. Phenotypic diversity among landraces was high, as expressed by the large range of variation for mean quantitative traits and the high (0.81) Shannon-Weaver diversity index. Landraces from Gezira-Gedarif tended to be shorter in stature, earlier in maturity and less sensitive to changes in photoperiod. They also had long, narrow and compact panicles that may result from adaptation to low rainfall and early adoption of mechanized farming practices. In contrast, taller and later maturing plant types characterized sorghums from Equatoria, most of which delayed their flowering in response to increased day-length. These sorghums included many genotypes with small and light kernels. Collections from Kassala showed a higher frequency of landraces with kernels that were more difficult to thresh. Landraces from Blue Nile tended to have greater agronomic eliteness with higher proportion of landraces with white kernels, poorly covered and that were easy to thresh. Sorghums from the Upper Nile tended to have loose panicles with poorly covered kernels that may result from adaptation to high rainfall of the Southern region. Although distinct distributions of types were represented by geographical origin, a high level of within-region diversity was present among all Sudanese sorghums.

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Main Authors: Grenier, Cécile, Bramel-Cox, P.J., Dahlberg, J., El Ahmadi, A., Mahmoud, M., Peterson, G., Rosenow, D., Ejeta, G.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:sorghum bicolor, germplasm, phenotypic differences, component analysis (statistics), sudan,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103305
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1033052023-12-08T19:25:22Z Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution Grenier, Cécile Bramel-Cox, P.J. Dahlberg, J. El Ahmadi, A. Mahmoud, M. Peterson, G. Rosenow, D. Ejeta, G. sorghum bicolor germplasm phenotypic differences component analysis (statistics) sudan Sorghum [Sorghumbicolor (L.) Moench] is a very important crop in the Sudan serving as a primary source of food, beverage, and total livelihood for millions of people in the country. The crop originated in the Northeast quadrant of Africa, and the Sudan is widely recognized as a major center of diversity. Although Sudanese sorghum germplasm has been assembled and stored over the last 50 years, careful analysis of this valuable germplasm has not been made. The objectives of this study were to assess phenotypic diversity and compare pattern of distribution among Sudanese sorghum landraces collected from different geographical regions. Phenotypic diversity among landraces was high, as expressed by the large range of variation for mean quantitative traits and the high (0.81) Shannon-Weaver diversity index. Landraces from Gezira-Gedarif tended to be shorter in stature, earlier in maturity and less sensitive to changes in photoperiod. They also had long, narrow and compact panicles that may result from adaptation to low rainfall and early adoption of mechanized farming practices. In contrast, taller and later maturing plant types characterized sorghums from Equatoria, most of which delayed their flowering in response to increased day-length. These sorghums included many genotypes with small and light kernels. Collections from Kassala showed a higher frequency of landraces with kernels that were more difficult to thresh. Landraces from Blue Nile tended to have greater agronomic eliteness with higher proportion of landraces with white kernels, poorly covered and that were easy to thresh. Sorghums from the Upper Nile tended to have loose panicles with poorly covered kernels that may result from adaptation to high rainfall of the Southern region. Although distinct distributions of types were represented by geographical origin, a high level of within-region diversity was present among all Sudanese sorghums. 2004 2019-08-21T14:12:54Z 2019-08-21T14:12:54Z Journal Article Grenier, C., Bramel, P.J., Dahlberg, J.A., El-Ahmadi, A., Mahmoud, M., Peterson, G.C., ... & Ejeta, G. (2004). Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 51(5), 489-500. 0925-9864 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103305 en Limited Access p. 489-500
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic sorghum bicolor
germplasm
phenotypic differences
component analysis (statistics)
sudan
sorghum bicolor
germplasm
phenotypic differences
component analysis (statistics)
sudan
spellingShingle sorghum bicolor
germplasm
phenotypic differences
component analysis (statistics)
sudan
sorghum bicolor
germplasm
phenotypic differences
component analysis (statistics)
sudan
Grenier, Cécile
Bramel-Cox, P.J.
Dahlberg, J.
El Ahmadi, A.
Mahmoud, M.
Peterson, G.
Rosenow, D.
Ejeta, G.
Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
description Sorghum [Sorghumbicolor (L.) Moench] is a very important crop in the Sudan serving as a primary source of food, beverage, and total livelihood for millions of people in the country. The crop originated in the Northeast quadrant of Africa, and the Sudan is widely recognized as a major center of diversity. Although Sudanese sorghum germplasm has been assembled and stored over the last 50 years, careful analysis of this valuable germplasm has not been made. The objectives of this study were to assess phenotypic diversity and compare pattern of distribution among Sudanese sorghum landraces collected from different geographical regions. Phenotypic diversity among landraces was high, as expressed by the large range of variation for mean quantitative traits and the high (0.81) Shannon-Weaver diversity index. Landraces from Gezira-Gedarif tended to be shorter in stature, earlier in maturity and less sensitive to changes in photoperiod. They also had long, narrow and compact panicles that may result from adaptation to low rainfall and early adoption of mechanized farming practices. In contrast, taller and later maturing plant types characterized sorghums from Equatoria, most of which delayed their flowering in response to increased day-length. These sorghums included many genotypes with small and light kernels. Collections from Kassala showed a higher frequency of landraces with kernels that were more difficult to thresh. Landraces from Blue Nile tended to have greater agronomic eliteness with higher proportion of landraces with white kernels, poorly covered and that were easy to thresh. Sorghums from the Upper Nile tended to have loose panicles with poorly covered kernels that may result from adaptation to high rainfall of the Southern region. Although distinct distributions of types were represented by geographical origin, a high level of within-region diversity was present among all Sudanese sorghums.
format Journal Article
topic_facet sorghum bicolor
germplasm
phenotypic differences
component analysis (statistics)
sudan
author Grenier, Cécile
Bramel-Cox, P.J.
Dahlberg, J.
El Ahmadi, A.
Mahmoud, M.
Peterson, G.
Rosenow, D.
Ejeta, G.
author_facet Grenier, Cécile
Bramel-Cox, P.J.
Dahlberg, J.
El Ahmadi, A.
Mahmoud, M.
Peterson, G.
Rosenow, D.
Ejeta, G.
author_sort Grenier, Cécile
title Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
title_short Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
title_full Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
title_fullStr Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
title_full_unstemmed Sorghums of the Sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
title_sort sorghums of the sudan: analysis of regional diversity and distribution
publishDate 2004
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103305
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