Cyanide and cassava breeding

Cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) contains cyanogenic glucosides which lead to the release of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) after hydrolysis. A study carried out using six cassava populations revealed that the broad-sense heritability for HCN was relatively low at 34.58 and 32.18 percent in roots and leav...

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Autores principales: Mahungu, N., Hahn, S.K., Chheda, H.R.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1994
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101070
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author Mahungu, N.
Hahn, S.K.
Chheda, H.R.
author_browse Chheda, H.R.
Hahn, S.K.
Mahungu, N.
author_facet Mahungu, N.
Hahn, S.K.
Chheda, H.R.
author_sort Mahungu, N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) contains cyanogenic glucosides which lead to the release of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) after hydrolysis. A study carried out using six cassava populations revealed that the broad-sense heritability for HCN was relatively low at 34.58 and 32.18 percent in roots and leaves respectively. Relationships between HCN in roots and leaves and twenty other cassava characters were examined. None of the characters was found significantly related to cyanide content in either leaf or root, except for a negative genotypic association between root HCN and plant height at harvest in some populations. Also a weak positive genotypic correlation (r = 0.20 and 0.26) between root yield and root HCN was found only in two populations while the same two traits had negative or no correlation in the other four populations. It was concluded that the presence of HCN in cassava does not confer on the plants a useful survival or protective mechanism except possibly to some wild animals. The study also indicated that in most breeding populations, it is possible to develop high-yielding cassava genotypes with low cyanide content; Cyanides; Hydrocyanic acid; Agronomic characters; Plant breeding; Nigeria Manihot esculenta; Cianuros; Acido cianhídrico; Características agronómicas; Fitomejoramiento; Nigeria Cassava; Yuca; Fisiología y bioquímica de la planta; Articles in proceedings; Artículos en memorias; Genética vegetaly fitomejoramiento Plant physiology and biochemistry; Plant genetics and breeding.
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spelling CGSpace1010702023-06-08T14:00:08Z Cyanide and cassava breeding Mahungu, N. Hahn, S.K. Chheda, H.R. cassava genotypes breeding population yields Cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) contains cyanogenic glucosides which lead to the release of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) after hydrolysis. A study carried out using six cassava populations revealed that the broad-sense heritability for HCN was relatively low at 34.58 and 32.18 percent in roots and leaves respectively. Relationships between HCN in roots and leaves and twenty other cassava characters were examined. None of the characters was found significantly related to cyanide content in either leaf or root, except for a negative genotypic association between root HCN and plant height at harvest in some populations. Also a weak positive genotypic correlation (r = 0.20 and 0.26) between root yield and root HCN was found only in two populations while the same two traits had negative or no correlation in the other four populations. It was concluded that the presence of HCN in cassava does not confer on the plants a useful survival or protective mechanism except possibly to some wild animals. The study also indicated that in most breeding populations, it is possible to develop high-yielding cassava genotypes with low cyanide content; Cyanides; Hydrocyanic acid; Agronomic characters; Plant breeding; Nigeria Manihot esculenta; Cianuros; Acido cianhídrico; Características agronómicas; Fitomejoramiento; Nigeria Cassava; Yuca; Fisiología y bioquímica de la planta; Articles in proceedings; Artículos en memorias; Genética vegetaly fitomejoramiento Plant physiology and biochemistry; Plant genetics and breeding. 1994 2019-04-24T12:29:50Z 2019-04-24T12:29:50Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101070 en Open Access Mahungu, N., Hahn, S.K. & Chheda, H.R. (1994). Cyanide and cassava breeding. In M.O. Akoroda (Ed.), Root crops for food security in Africa: Proceedings of the Fifth Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops-African Branch, 22-28 November 1992, Kampala, Uganda: IITA, (p. 101-105).
spellingShingle cassava
genotypes
breeding
population
yields
Mahungu, N.
Hahn, S.K.
Chheda, H.R.
Cyanide and cassava breeding
title Cyanide and cassava breeding
title_full Cyanide and cassava breeding
title_fullStr Cyanide and cassava breeding
title_full_unstemmed Cyanide and cassava breeding
title_short Cyanide and cassava breeding
title_sort cyanide and cassava breeding
topic cassava
genotypes
breeding
population
yields
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101070
work_keys_str_mv AT mahungun cyanideandcassavabreeding
AT hahnsk cyanideandcassavabreeding
AT chhedahr cyanideandcassavabreeding