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Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India
Aroids are an important group of indigenous tuber crops, grown widely for their leaves, petioles, stolons, corms, and cormels. A total of 53 genotypes were evaluated for their genetic diversity in northeastern region of India. At household level, a total of 16 landraces of Aroids were recorded havin...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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Frontiers Media S.A.
2023
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10102657/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37063334 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2023.1065745 |
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author | Verma, Veerendra Kumar Kumar, Amit Rymbai, Heiplanmi Talang, Hammylliende Chaudhuri, Priyajit Devi, Mayanglambam Bilashini Singh, Nongmaithem Uttam Hazarika, Samrendra Mishra, Vinay Kumar |
author_facet | Verma, Veerendra Kumar Kumar, Amit Rymbai, Heiplanmi Talang, Hammylliende Chaudhuri, Priyajit Devi, Mayanglambam Bilashini Singh, Nongmaithem Uttam Hazarika, Samrendra Mishra, Vinay Kumar |
author_sort | Verma, Veerendra Kumar |
collection | PubMed |
description | Aroids are an important group of indigenous tuber crops, grown widely for their leaves, petioles, stolons, corms, and cormels. A total of 53 genotypes were evaluated for their genetic diversity in northeastern region of India. At household level, a total of 16 landraces of Aroids were recorded having different ethnobotanical uses. Based on the population study under Jhum/Shifting farming, landrace Rengama was dominant in area with 47% of the total population followed by Tamachongkham and Tasakrek. However, Pugarkusu and Chigi occupied 33.0 and 24.0% of the population, respectively under backyard farming, and were considered as major landraces. Tamachongkham, high in acridity and total oxalate content (0.82%), was used for cooking with meat, while Tasakrek was used as a baby food due to high total sugar (>3.0%), low in acridity, and total oxalate content (<0.12%). The Simpson’s diversity index of the backyards was higher (0.80) as compared to Jhum field (0.63). The genotypes showed wider variability in growth and yield attributes like; plant height (89.4–206.1 cm), number of side shoots (1.84–5.92), corm weight (38.0–683.3 g), cormel weight (14.0–348.3 g), yield (0.24–1.83 kg plant(−1)). Similarly, wide variations were also observed for quality traits like total sugar (1.93–4.94%); starch (15.32–32.49%), total oxalate (0.10–0.82%), and dry matter (16.75–27.08%) content. Except for total oxalate, all the growth and yield attributes have shown high heritability and moderate to high genetic advance. Molecular analysis (33 polymorphic SSR markers) detected a total of 136 alleles, ranged 3 to 8 alleles per marker. The observed heterozygosity (0.24) was less than expected heterozygosity (0.69). The group-wise maximum genetic divergence was observed between Colocasia fallax (cv. Chigi) to C. esculenta var. aquatilis (cv. Tharsing); C. fallax (cv. Chigi) to C. gigantea (cv. Ganima) and C. gigantea (cv. Ganima) to Xanthosoma spp., while it was least between eddo and dasheen. The findings indicated, a wider diversity and distinct ethnobotanical uses of Aroid landraces at the house hold levels, which should be conserved and popularized to ensure nutritional security. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10102657 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | Frontiers Media S.A. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-101026572023-04-15 Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India Verma, Veerendra Kumar Kumar, Amit Rymbai, Heiplanmi Talang, Hammylliende Chaudhuri, Priyajit Devi, Mayanglambam Bilashini Singh, Nongmaithem Uttam Hazarika, Samrendra Mishra, Vinay Kumar Front Nutr Nutrition Aroids are an important group of indigenous tuber crops, grown widely for their leaves, petioles, stolons, corms, and cormels. A total of 53 genotypes were evaluated for their genetic diversity in northeastern region of India. At household level, a total of 16 landraces of Aroids were recorded having different ethnobotanical uses. Based on the population study under Jhum/Shifting farming, landrace Rengama was dominant in area with 47% of the total population followed by Tamachongkham and Tasakrek. However, Pugarkusu and Chigi occupied 33.0 and 24.0% of the population, respectively under backyard farming, and were considered as major landraces. Tamachongkham, high in acridity and total oxalate content (0.82%), was used for cooking with meat, while Tasakrek was used as a baby food due to high total sugar (>3.0%), low in acridity, and total oxalate content (<0.12%). The Simpson’s diversity index of the backyards was higher (0.80) as compared to Jhum field (0.63). The genotypes showed wider variability in growth and yield attributes like; plant height (89.4–206.1 cm), number of side shoots (1.84–5.92), corm weight (38.0–683.3 g), cormel weight (14.0–348.3 g), yield (0.24–1.83 kg plant(−1)). Similarly, wide variations were also observed for quality traits like total sugar (1.93–4.94%); starch (15.32–32.49%), total oxalate (0.10–0.82%), and dry matter (16.75–27.08%) content. Except for total oxalate, all the growth and yield attributes have shown high heritability and moderate to high genetic advance. Molecular analysis (33 polymorphic SSR markers) detected a total of 136 alleles, ranged 3 to 8 alleles per marker. The observed heterozygosity (0.24) was less than expected heterozygosity (0.69). The group-wise maximum genetic divergence was observed between Colocasia fallax (cv. Chigi) to C. esculenta var. aquatilis (cv. Tharsing); C. fallax (cv. Chigi) to C. gigantea (cv. Ganima) and C. gigantea (cv. Ganima) to Xanthosoma spp., while it was least between eddo and dasheen. The findings indicated, a wider diversity and distinct ethnobotanical uses of Aroid landraces at the house hold levels, which should be conserved and popularized to ensure nutritional security. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10102657/ /pubmed/37063334 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2023.1065745 Text en Copyright © 2023 Verma, Kumar, Rymbai, Talang, Chaudhuri, Devi, Singh, Hazarika and Mishra. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms. |
spellingShingle | Nutrition Verma, Veerendra Kumar Kumar, Amit Rymbai, Heiplanmi Talang, Hammylliende Chaudhuri, Priyajit Devi, Mayanglambam Bilashini Singh, Nongmaithem Uttam Hazarika, Samrendra Mishra, Vinay Kumar Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India |
title | Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India |
title_full | Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India |
title_fullStr | Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India |
title_full_unstemmed | Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India |
title_short | Assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern India |
title_sort | assessment of ethnobotanical uses, household, and regional genetic diversity of aroid species grown in northeastern india |
topic | Nutrition |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10102657/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37063334 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2023.1065745 |
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