Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought
Cassava (manioc, yuca, or mandioca; Manihot esculenta Crantz, Euphorbiaceae) is an important cash crop and food crop of resource-limited farmers in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The storage roots are utilised either fresh, as in the case of sweet cultivars low in cyanogenic glycosides, or after processing into dry products such as fl our, starch and animal feed in the case of bitter cultivars high in cyanogenic glycosides (Balagopalan, 2002; Dufour,1988; Essers, 1995; Westby, 2002). Because of its relative high productivity under conditions of erratic rainfall and low-fertility soils, 250 million Africans depend on cassava as food, with more than 90 percent of the 117 million tons produced in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) in 2007 being used for fresh consumption and processed food (Philips et al, 2006). A study by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) predicts an overall 2.44 percent annual growth in the use of cassava as food in SSA, closely mirroring population growth, and a growth of 1.53 percent per annum in cassava for feed (Scott et al, 2000).
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Format: | Book Chapter biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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CGIAR Generation Challenge Programme
2011
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Subjects: | agriculture, climate, phenotypes, drought tolerance, cassava, manihot esculenta, |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42043 http://generationcp.org/onlinepubls/chapterii31/index.html |
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dig-cgspace-10568-420432023-06-08T13:28:01Z Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought Okogbenin, Emmanuel Setter, Tim L. Ferguson M Mutegi R Alves, A.C. Ceballos, H. Fregene, Martin A. agriculture climate phenotypes drought tolerance cassava manihot esculenta Cassava (manioc, yuca, or mandioca; Manihot esculenta Crantz, Euphorbiaceae) is an important cash crop and food crop of resource-limited farmers in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The storage roots are utilised either fresh, as in the case of sweet cultivars low in cyanogenic glycosides, or after processing into dry products such as fl our, starch and animal feed in the case of bitter cultivars high in cyanogenic glycosides (Balagopalan, 2002; Dufour,1988; Essers, 1995; Westby, 2002). Because of its relative high productivity under conditions of erratic rainfall and low-fertility soils, 250 million Africans depend on cassava as food, with more than 90 percent of the 117 million tons produced in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) in 2007 being used for fresh consumption and processed food (Philips et al, 2006). A study by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) predicts an overall 2.44 percent annual growth in the use of cassava as food in SSA, closely mirroring population growth, and a growth of 1.53 percent per annum in cassava for feed (Scott et al, 2000). 2011 2014-08-15T12:13:19Z 2014-08-15T12:13:19Z Book Chapter Okogbenin E, Setter TL, Ferguson M, Mutegi R, Alves AC, Ceballos H, Fregene M. (2011). Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought. In: Monneveux P, Ribaut JM, eds. Drought phenotyping in crops: from theory to practice. Texcoco, Mexico: CGIAR Generation Challenge Programme. p. 395-410. 978-970-648-178-8 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42043 http://generationcp.org/onlinepubls/chapterii31/index.html en Open Access p. 395-410 CGIAR Generation Challenge Programme |
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agriculture climate phenotypes drought tolerance cassava manihot esculenta agriculture climate phenotypes drought tolerance cassava manihot esculenta |
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agriculture climate phenotypes drought tolerance cassava manihot esculenta agriculture climate phenotypes drought tolerance cassava manihot esculenta Okogbenin, Emmanuel Setter, Tim L. Ferguson M Mutegi R Alves, A.C. Ceballos, H. Fregene, Martin A. Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
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Cassava (manioc, yuca, or mandioca; Manihot esculenta Crantz, Euphorbiaceae) is an important cash crop and food crop of resource-limited farmers in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The storage roots are utilised either fresh, as in the case of sweet cultivars low in cyanogenic glycosides, or after processing into dry products such as fl our, starch and animal feed in the case of bitter cultivars high in cyanogenic glycosides (Balagopalan, 2002; Dufour,1988; Essers, 1995; Westby, 2002). Because of its relative high productivity under conditions of erratic rainfall and low-fertility soils, 250 million Africans depend on cassava as food, with more than 90 percent of the 117 million tons produced in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) in 2007 being used for fresh consumption and processed food (Philips et al, 2006). A study by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) predicts an overall 2.44 percent annual growth in the use of cassava as food in SSA, closely mirroring population growth, and a growth of 1.53 percent per annum in cassava for feed (Scott et al, 2000). |
format |
Book Chapter |
topic_facet |
agriculture climate phenotypes drought tolerance cassava manihot esculenta |
author |
Okogbenin, Emmanuel Setter, Tim L. Ferguson M Mutegi R Alves, A.C. Ceballos, H. Fregene, Martin A. |
author_facet |
Okogbenin, Emmanuel Setter, Tim L. Ferguson M Mutegi R Alves, A.C. Ceballos, H. Fregene, Martin A. |
author_sort |
Okogbenin, Emmanuel |
title |
Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
title_short |
Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
title_full |
Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
title_fullStr |
Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
title_full_unstemmed |
Phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
title_sort |
phenotyping cassava for adaptation to drought |
publisher |
CGIAR Generation Challenge Programme |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42043 http://generationcp.org/onlinepubls/chapterii31/index.html |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT okogbeninemmanuel phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought AT settertiml phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought AT fergusonm phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought AT mutegir phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought AT alvesac phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought AT ceballosh phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought AT fregenemartina phenotypingcassavaforadaptationtodrought |
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1779048564219969536 |