Similar Items: Breeding in Africa for Africa
- Selection of parents in a population hybrid breeding scheme for sweetpotato in Uganda
- Breeding orange-fleshed sweetpotato varieties for East Africa.
- Early-stage phenotyping of sweet potato virus disease caused by sweet potato chlorotic stunt virus and sweet potato virus C to support breeding
- Benefits of participatory plant breeding (PPB) as exemplified by the first-ever officially released PPB-bred sweet potato cultivar
- Release of orange-fleshed sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas [l.] Lam.) cultivars in Mozambique through an accelerated breeding scheme
- Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas L.)
Author: Mwanga, Robert O.M.
- Genome sequences of two diploid wild relatives of cultivated sweetpotato reveal targets for genetic improvement
- ‘RW11-17’, ‘RW11-1860’, ‘RW11-2419’, ‘RW11-2560’, ‘RW11-2910’, and ‘RW11-4923’ sweetpotato.
- Insect pests of sweetpotato in Uganda: farmers' perceptions of their importance and control practices
- Effects of sweet potato feathery mottle virus and sweet potato chlorotic stunt virus on the yield of sweet potato in Uganda
- Genetic variability for yield and nutritional quality in yam bean (Pachyrhizus sp.)
- Genetic diversity in white- and orange-fleshed sweetpotato farmer varieties from East Africa evaluated by simple sequence repeat markers
Author: Andrade, M.I.
- The introduction of orange-fleshed sweet potato in Mozambican diets: a marginal change to make a major difference.
- Evaluation and large-scale dissemination of orange-fleshed sweetpotato in SubSaharan Africa
- Unleashing the potential of sweetpotato in Sub-Saharan Africa: Current challenges and way forward
- Everything you ever wanted to know about sweetpotato: Reaching agents of change ToT manual. 3: Sweetpotato seed systems
- Climate change and seed systems of roots, tubers and bananas: The cases of potato in Kenya and sweetpotato in Mozambique
- Nutrient-dense orange-fleshed sweetpotato: advances in drought-tolerance breeding and understanding of management practices for sustainable next-generation cropping systems in Sub-Saharan Africa