Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical

The origen of the cultivated cocoa is a highly controversial subject and one that is still very confusing. No experimental work has been carried out in investigating this problem and the cytological approach has not been attempted. As a prelude to starting an investigation of this kind, a study of t...

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Autor principal: Mora Urpí, J.
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Instituto Interamericano de Ciencias Agrícolas (IICA) 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/13923
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author Mora Urpí, J.
author_browse Mora Urpí, J.
author_facet Mora Urpí, J.
author_sort Mora Urpí, J.
collection Repositorio CATIE
description The origen of the cultivated cocoa is a highly controversial subject and one that is still very confusing. No experimental work has been carried out in investigating this problem and the cytological approach has not been attempted. As a prelude to starting an investigation of this kind, a study of the geographical distribution and variability of the cocoa populations of Tropical America was conducted. It was found that variability is considerably greater in the Central American populations than in those of South America. It was observed that all the cacao types known are found in Central America but not all of them can be found in South America. Based on these observations and on the historical data, the author locates in Central America the center of domestication of the cultivated cocoa. Consequently he considers cocoa as introduced in South America probably in pre-colombian times, and consider the geographical distribution of the Criollo type as a proof of this theory. The author agrees with Holdridge in considering the pentagona form as playing an important role in the origin of the existing cultivated hybrid complex. Furthermore, the author considers as very probable that pentagona, native from Central America, is the original and most ancient from of T. cacao from which, through mutation, introgressive bybridization and geographical isolation, the present populations arose.
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institution Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza
language Español
publishDate 2025
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spelling RepoCATIE139232025-09-03T23:30:30Z Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical Mora Urpí, J. Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao Variedad||varieties||variedade||variété Variación genética||genetic variation||variação genética||variation génétique Variedad indígena||land varieties||variedade indígena||variété indigène América tropical||tropical America||América Tropical||Amérique tropicale Sede Central The origen of the cultivated cocoa is a highly controversial subject and one that is still very confusing. No experimental work has been carried out in investigating this problem and the cytological approach has not been attempted. As a prelude to starting an investigation of this kind, a study of the geographical distribution and variability of the cocoa populations of Tropical America was conducted. It was found that variability is considerably greater in the Central American populations than in those of South America. It was observed that all the cacao types known are found in Central America but not all of them can be found in South America. Based on these observations and on the historical data, the author locates in Central America the center of domestication of the cultivated cocoa. Consequently he considers cocoa as introduced in South America probably in pre-colombian times, and consider the geographical distribution of the Criollo type as a proof of this theory. The author agrees with Holdridge in considering the pentagona form as playing an important role in the origin of the existing cultivated hybrid complex. Furthermore, the author considers as very probable that pentagona, native from Central America, is the original and most ancient from of T. cacao from which, through mutation, introgressive bybridization and geographical isolation, the present populations arose. 2025-09-01T16:20:19Z 2025-09-01T16:20:19Z 1958-01 Artículo https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/13923 openAccess es Turrialba; Vol.8, no. 1 10 páginas application/pdf Instituto Interamericano de Ciencias Agrícolas (IICA)
spellingShingle Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao
Variedad||varieties||variedade||variété
Variación genética||genetic variation||variação genética||variation génétique
Variedad indígena||land varieties||variedade indígena||variété indigène
América tropical||tropical America||América Tropical||Amérique tropicale
Sede Central
Mora Urpí, J.
Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical
title Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical
title_full Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical
title_fullStr Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical
title_full_unstemmed Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical
title_short Notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la América Tropical
title_sort notas sobre el posible origen y la variabilidad del cacao cultivado en la america tropical
topic Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao||Theobroma cacao
Variedad||varieties||variedade||variété
Variación genética||genetic variation||variação genética||variation génétique
Variedad indígena||land varieties||variedade indígena||variété indigène
América tropical||tropical America||América Tropical||Amérique tropicale
Sede Central
url https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/13923
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