Title
Phenotypic Diversity and Patterns of Variation in West and Central African Plantains (Musa Spp., AAB group Musaceae)
Date Issued
01 July 1995
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Swennen R.
Vuylsteke D.
Plantain and Banana Improvement Program, IITA High Rainfall Station
Publisher(s)
Springer-Verlag
Abstract
Plantains (Musa spp., AAB group) are an important food crop and an integral component of the farming systems in the lowland humid forest zone of West and Central Africa. A group of 24 plantain cultivars, representing the major variability in West Africa, was evaluated for nine quantitative characters. The association between growth and yield parameters in this African plantain germplasm was examined to determine if the pattern of quantitative variation in inflorescence and vegetative traits agreed with taxonomic groupings based on inflorescence type and plant size. Phenotypic correlations between these traits were calculated. Giant cultivars were taller, their pseudostem thicker, and they flowered much later than medium-sized cultivars. Giant cultivars produced more foliage, resulting in heavier bunches with more hands and fruits. Groupings that resulted following principal component analysis (PCA) supported conventional taxonomic groupings of plantains. PC A was based mainly on time to flowering, pseudostem height, and number of fruits. The last two traits, in combination with the number of hermaphrodite flowers and the persistence of the male bud, sufficed to group plantain cultivars. © 1995 The New York Botanical Garden.
Start page
320
End page
327
Volume
49
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Tecnología de modificación genética
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0028815988
Source
Economic Botany
Resource of which it is part
Economic Botany
ISSN of the container
00130001
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus