Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones

Cyanide is toxic to most living beings. Cassava roots release cyanide in the human body if they are not properly processed before consumption. The environmental effects on the cyanogenic potential (0.1» and some cuIinary qualities of five divergent cassava clones were studied in two agro-ecological...

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Autores principales: Githunguri, C., Ekanayake, I.J., Imung, J., Chweya, J.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92671
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author Githunguri, C.
Ekanayake, I.J.
Imung, J.
Chweya, J.
author_browse Chweya, J.
Ekanayake, I.J.
Githunguri, C.
Imung, J.
author_facet Githunguri, C.
Ekanayake, I.J.
Imung, J.
Chweya, J.
author_sort Githunguri, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cyanide is toxic to most living beings. Cassava roots release cyanide in the human body if they are not properly processed before consumption. The environmental effects on the cyanogenic potential (0.1» and some cuIinary qualities of five divergent cassava clones were studied in two agro-ecological zones (AEZ) in Nigeria. Minjibir in the dry Sudan savannah zone, and Ibadan, in the wet forest-savanna transition zone, represented the ABZs. Plants were sampled periodically and subjected to statistical analysis. The lowest and highest root cyanogenic potential (RCNP) was associated with wet and dry environments, respectively. RCNP changed with plant age and environment. The clone having highest RCNP had the highest sugar content, which negated the association of bitter cassava with high RC.l\lP or sweet cassava with low RCNP. And the clones had a normal sweet taste, both within and across zones. Taste of cassava roots was not affected by environmental changes and was not associated to RCNP. To avoid possible cassava toxicity on ''boil and eat societies" that associate sweet cassava roots with low RCNP or vice versa, variety recommendations should be based on cyanide analysis and not on taste or sugar content.
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spelling CGSpace926712023-06-08T14:48:27Z Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones Githunguri, C. Ekanayake, I.J. Imung, J. Chweya, J. cassava clones cyanide cyanogenic glycosides dry and wet environment genotypes post harvest technology Cyanide is toxic to most living beings. Cassava roots release cyanide in the human body if they are not properly processed before consumption. The environmental effects on the cyanogenic potential (0.1» and some cuIinary qualities of five divergent cassava clones were studied in two agro-ecological zones (AEZ) in Nigeria. Minjibir in the dry Sudan savannah zone, and Ibadan, in the wet forest-savanna transition zone, represented the ABZs. Plants were sampled periodically and subjected to statistical analysis. The lowest and highest root cyanogenic potential (RCNP) was associated with wet and dry environments, respectively. RCNP changed with plant age and environment. The clone having highest RCNP had the highest sugar content, which negated the association of bitter cassava with high RC.l\lP or sweet cassava with low RCNP. And the clones had a normal sweet taste, both within and across zones. Taste of cassava roots was not affected by environmental changes and was not associated to RCNP. To avoid possible cassava toxicity on ''boil and eat societies" that associate sweet cassava roots with low RCNP or vice versa, variety recommendations should be based on cyanide analysis and not on taste or sugar content. 2000 2018-05-17T09:03:02Z 2018-05-17T09:03:02Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92671 en Limited Access Githunguri, C., Ekanayake, I., Imung, J. & Chweya, J. (2000). Environmental effects on the tuberous roots' cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones. In Proceedings of the SUSAN-IBS scientific workshop,"Biometry and Quality of Life", 23-28 August, 1999, Ibadan, Nigeria: IITA, (p. 59-66).
spellingShingle cassava clones
cyanide
cyanogenic glycosides
dry and wet environment
genotypes
post harvest technology
Githunguri, C.
Ekanayake, I.J.
Imung, J.
Chweya, J.
Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
title Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
title_full Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
title_fullStr Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
title_full_unstemmed Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
title_short Environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential, sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
title_sort environmental effects on the tuberous roots cyanogenic potential sugar content and taste of divergent cassava clones
topic cassava clones
cyanide
cyanogenic glycosides
dry and wet environment
genotypes
post harvest technology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92671
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