Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement

Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas Lam) is a staple food globally, but it has remained underutilised resource in Ghana due to lack of consumer preferred cultivars. There is the need to develop staple-type sweetpotato cultivars which are preferred by consumers to increase sweetpotato use as a food security...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baafi, E., Ofori, K., Blay, E., Gracen, V., Manu-Aduening, J., Carey, E.E.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: African Journals Online 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141848
_version_ 1855543382845161472
author Baafi, E.
Ofori, K.
Blay, E.
Gracen, V.
Manu-Aduening, J.
Carey, E.E.
author_browse Baafi, E.
Blay, E.
Carey, E.E.
Gracen, V.
Manu-Aduening, J.
Ofori, K.
author_facet Baafi, E.
Ofori, K.
Blay, E.
Gracen, V.
Manu-Aduening, J.
Carey, E.E.
author_sort Baafi, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas Lam) is a staple food globally, but it has remained underutilised resource in Ghana due to lack of consumer preferred cultivars. There is the need to develop staple-type sweetpotato cultivars which are preferred by consumers to increase sweetpotato use as a food security, health and industrial crop commodity in Ghana. This study was conducted to evaluate the breeding potential of sweetpotato germplasm for the development of farmer and consumer preferred varieties in Ghana. A total of 115 sweetpotato accessions were evaluated for genetic variability. Significant (P<0.01) differences were observed indicating genetic diversity. G x E was significant for all traits, except dry matter, sucrose, total sugar, and starch content. Phenotypic Coefficient of Variation (PCV) ranged from 4.78% for starch content to 63.40% for marketable root weight. Genotypic Coefficient of Variation (GCV) ranged from 4.07% for starch content to 55.35% for marketable root weight. Broad-sense heritability estimates varied from medium (0.61) to high (0.90) for all the traits, except for sucrose content. Predicted improvement over the means is 10 up to 105% for all traits, except starch (7.13%). This indicates sufficient useful genetic variation prospect which could be used to provide substantial improvement through selection of superior genotypes. The strong positive genetic association between dry matter and starch (r = 0.71), and strong negative relationship for sugar and dry matter (r = -0.77) and starch content (r = -0.99) indicates the possibility of developing non-sweet high dry matter sweetpotatoes, which are the preferred varieties in Ghana.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace141848
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher African Journals Online
publisherStr African Journals Online
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1418482025-03-11T12:14:31Z Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement Baafi, E. Ofori, K. Blay, E. Gracen, V. Manu-Aduening, J. Carey, E.E. sweet potatoes Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas Lam) is a staple food globally, but it has remained underutilised resource in Ghana due to lack of consumer preferred cultivars. There is the need to develop staple-type sweetpotato cultivars which are preferred by consumers to increase sweetpotato use as a food security, health and industrial crop commodity in Ghana. This study was conducted to evaluate the breeding potential of sweetpotato germplasm for the development of farmer and consumer preferred varieties in Ghana. A total of 115 sweetpotato accessions were evaluated for genetic variability. Significant (P<0.01) differences were observed indicating genetic diversity. G x E was significant for all traits, except dry matter, sucrose, total sugar, and starch content. Phenotypic Coefficient of Variation (PCV) ranged from 4.78% for starch content to 63.40% for marketable root weight. Genotypic Coefficient of Variation (GCV) ranged from 4.07% for starch content to 55.35% for marketable root weight. Broad-sense heritability estimates varied from medium (0.61) to high (0.90) for all the traits, except for sucrose content. Predicted improvement over the means is 10 up to 105% for all traits, except starch (7.13%). This indicates sufficient useful genetic variation prospect which could be used to provide substantial improvement through selection of superior genotypes. The strong positive genetic association between dry matter and starch (r = 0.71), and strong negative relationship for sugar and dry matter (r = -0.77) and starch content (r = -0.99) indicates the possibility of developing non-sweet high dry matter sweetpotatoes, which are the preferred varieties in Ghana. 2016-12-02 2024-05-15T16:56:25Z 2024-05-15T16:56:25Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141848 en Open Access African Journals Online Baafi, E.; Ofori, K.; Blay, E.; Gracen, V.; Manu-Aduening, J.; Carey, E. 2016. Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement. African Crop Science Journal. ISSN 1021-9730. 24(4), 377. https://doi.org/10.4314/acsj.v24i4.4
spellingShingle sweet potatoes
Baafi, E.
Ofori, K.
Blay, E.
Gracen, V.
Manu-Aduening, J.
Carey, E.E.
Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement
title Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement
title_full Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement
title_fullStr Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement
title_full_unstemmed Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement
title_short Exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end-user traits improvement
title_sort exploitation of genetic potential of sweetpotato for end user traits improvement
topic sweet potatoes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141848
work_keys_str_mv AT baafie exploitationofgeneticpotentialofsweetpotatoforendusertraitsimprovement
AT oforik exploitationofgeneticpotentialofsweetpotatoforendusertraitsimprovement
AT blaye exploitationofgeneticpotentialofsweetpotatoforendusertraitsimprovement
AT gracenv exploitationofgeneticpotentialofsweetpotatoforendusertraitsimprovement
AT manuadueningj exploitationofgeneticpotentialofsweetpotatoforendusertraitsimprovement
AT careyee exploitationofgeneticpotentialofsweetpotatoforendusertraitsimprovement