Root crops management technology

The potential and status of root crop technology (potatoes, sweet potatoes, cassava, yams, cocoyams) in Asia are described. Cassava presents the best perspectives as a low-cost energy source. In the Philippines, a surface area of 119,300 and 117,970 ha was planted to cassava with yields of 5.7 and 5...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Obordo, RA
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 1978
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69897
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author Obordo, RA
author_browse Obordo, RA
author_facet Obordo, RA
author_sort Obordo, RA
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The potential and status of root crop technology (potatoes, sweet potatoes, cassava, yams, cocoyams) in Asia are described. Cassava presents the best perspectives as a low-cost energy source. In the Philippines, a surface area of 119,300 and 117,970 ha was planted to cassava with yields of 5.7 and 5.3 t/ha in 1975-76, resp. Cassava production practices, post-harvest management, marketing practices and utilization are reviewed. Research at national and international levels is presented. Currently the intention is to modify technologies for use under Asian conditions. Emphasis is placed on selecting var. adapted to acid and infertile soils (300 million ha in tropical regions of America and Asia), in the use of HI as a key factor in genetic research, the obtainment of max. yields with an optimum LAI, and in rapid propagation techniques. The main problems industries face ue indicated and the following solutions are proposed: introduction of input and management technologies; credit programs and extension services; support research on the utilization of root crops and the coordinated research oriented towards the solving of problems.Suggestions for future research are presented. The national program of root crops in the Philippines is included along with a brief descriptive work of the main crops. (CIAT)
format Conference Paper
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publishDate 1978
publishDateRange 1978
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spelling CGSpace698972025-11-05T17:37:11Z Root crops management technology Obordo, RA manihot esculenta cultivation deterioration development marketing processing production research starch crops storage taxonomy uses The potential and status of root crop technology (potatoes, sweet potatoes, cassava, yams, cocoyams) in Asia are described. Cassava presents the best perspectives as a low-cost energy source. In the Philippines, a surface area of 119,300 and 117,970 ha was planted to cassava with yields of 5.7 and 5.3 t/ha in 1975-76, resp. Cassava production practices, post-harvest management, marketing practices and utilization are reviewed. Research at national and international levels is presented. Currently the intention is to modify technologies for use under Asian conditions. Emphasis is placed on selecting var. adapted to acid and infertile soils (300 million ha in tropical regions of America and Asia), in the use of HI as a key factor in genetic research, the obtainment of max. yields with an optimum LAI, and in rapid propagation techniques. The main problems industries face ue indicated and the following solutions are proposed: introduction of input and management technologies; credit programs and extension services; support research on the utilization of root crops and the coordinated research oriented towards the solving of problems.Suggestions for future research are presented. The national program of root crops in the Philippines is included along with a brief descriptive work of the main crops. (CIAT) 1978 2016-01-18T13:33:59Z 2016-01-18T13:33:59Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69897 en Open Access application/pdf International Center for Tropical Agriculture OBORDO, R.A. 1978. Root crops management technology. Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), Cali, CO. 97 p.
spellingShingle manihot esculenta
cultivation
deterioration
development
marketing
processing
production
research
starch crops
storage
taxonomy
uses
Obordo, RA
Root crops management technology
title Root crops management technology
title_full Root crops management technology
title_fullStr Root crops management technology
title_full_unstemmed Root crops management technology
title_short Root crops management technology
title_sort root crops management technology
topic manihot esculenta
cultivation
deterioration
development
marketing
processing
production
research
starch crops
storage
taxonomy
uses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69897
work_keys_str_mv AT obordora rootcropsmanagementtechnology