Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids

Hybrids adapted to West and Central Africa were developed by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in the 1980s, which enable the establishment of several private seed companies in Nigeria. Despite the superior agronomic performance of hybrids, farmers still prefer their traditi...

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Main Authors: Maziya-Dixon, B.B., Kling, J., Okoruwa, A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Francés
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92633
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author Maziya-Dixon, B.B.
Kling, J.
Okoruwa, A.
author_browse Kling, J.
Maziya-Dixon, B.B.
Okoruwa, A.
author_facet Maziya-Dixon, B.B.
Kling, J.
Okoruwa, A.
author_sort Maziya-Dixon, B.B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Hybrids adapted to West and Central Africa were developed by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in the 1980s, which enable the establishment of several private seed companies in Nigeria. Despite the superior agronomic performance of hybrids, farmers still prefer their traditional cultivars in some areas because they posses desired storage and processing characteristics for local maize dishes. A study was conducted to evaluate physical, chemical and water absorption characteristic of eleven tropical maize hybrids developed at IITA as indicators of their suitability for common end- uses in the region. Significant different were observed among hybrids for all the parameters investigated but none of the hybrids excelled in all quality characteristics. Hybrid 8644-31 had relatively high test weight, thousand kernel weight, hardness index, percent protein, ash, and crude fibre. However, it was low in sugar content total sugar, and water absorption index in grain. Protein, ash, crude fibre, starch, amylase, and amylopectin values for all hybrids fell within normal range for maize. Value for all total sugar ranged from 3.04 to 5.69% and fat content range from 3.35 to 9.80%. Nearly all the hybrids had fat content values which were higher than those reported elsewhere for normal maize. The presence of genetic variation among the hybrids suggests that potentials exist for improvement of grain quality to suit specific processing and food use requirements through selection and breeding. Breeding programmes in developing countries should target hybrid development to meet the requirement of producers, processors, and consumers.
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Francés
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spelling CGSpace926332023-06-12T16:14:16Z Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids Maziya-Dixon, B.B. Kling, J. Okoruwa, A. hybrids crude fibre proteins maize farmers food crop Hybrids adapted to West and Central Africa were developed by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in the 1980s, which enable the establishment of several private seed companies in Nigeria. Despite the superior agronomic performance of hybrids, farmers still prefer their traditional cultivars in some areas because they posses desired storage and processing characteristics for local maize dishes. A study was conducted to evaluate physical, chemical and water absorption characteristic of eleven tropical maize hybrids developed at IITA as indicators of their suitability for common end- uses in the region. Significant different were observed among hybrids for all the parameters investigated but none of the hybrids excelled in all quality characteristics. Hybrid 8644-31 had relatively high test weight, thousand kernel weight, hardness index, percent protein, ash, and crude fibre. However, it was low in sugar content total sugar, and water absorption index in grain. Protein, ash, crude fibre, starch, amylase, and amylopectin values for all hybrids fell within normal range for maize. Value for all total sugar ranged from 3.04 to 5.69% and fat content range from 3.35 to 9.80%. Nearly all the hybrids had fat content values which were higher than those reported elsewhere for normal maize. The presence of genetic variation among the hybrids suggests that potentials exist for improvement of grain quality to suit specific processing and food use requirements through selection and breeding. Breeding programmes in developing countries should target hybrid development to meet the requirement of producers, processors, and consumers. 2000 2018-05-17T09:02:55Z 2018-05-17T09:02:55Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92633 en fr Limited Access Maziya-Dixon, B., Kling, J. & Okoruwa, A. (2000). Physical, chemical and water absorption characteristics of tropical maize hybrids. African Crop Science Journal, 8(4), 419-428.
spellingShingle hybrids
crude fibre
proteins
maize
farmers
food crop
Maziya-Dixon, B.B.
Kling, J.
Okoruwa, A.
Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
title Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
title_full Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
title_fullStr Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
title_full_unstemmed Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
title_short Physical, chemical, and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
title_sort physical chemical and water absorption characterisitics of tropical maize hybrids
topic hybrids
crude fibre
proteins
maize
farmers
food crop
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92633
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