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    Suitability of existing Musa morphological descriptors to characterize East African highland ‘matooke’ bananas

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    Journal Article (2.536Mb)
    Authors
    Batte, M.
    Mukiibi, A.
    Swennen, Rony L.
    Uwimana, B.
    Pocasangre, L.
    Hovmalm, H.P.
    Geleta, M.
    Ortiz, R.
    Date Issued
    2018-02
    Date Online
    2017-09
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
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    Citation
    Batte, M., Mukiibi, A., Swennen, R., Uwimana, B., Pocasangre, L., Hovmalm, H.P., ... & Ortiz, R. (2018). Suitability of existing Musa morphological descriptors to characterize East African highland ‘matooke’bananas. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 1-13.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89020
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-017-0562-9
    Abstract/Description
    Morphological traits are commonly used for characterizing plant genetic resources. Germplasm characterization should be based on distinctly identifiable, stable and heritable traits that are expressed consistently and are easy to distinguish by the human eye. Characterization and documentation of a representative sample of East African highland bananas (Lujugira–Mutika subgroup) was carried out following an internationally accepted standard protocol for bananas. Eleven cultivars were characterized using an existing set of minimum descriptors (31 qualitative and quantitative traits) with the aim of determining stable descriptors and the ability of these descriptors to distinguish among East African highland banana cultivars. There was variation in stability of these descriptors within cultivars and across the 11 cultivars. Only 10 (32%) out of 31 descriptors studied were stable in the 11 cultivars. However, they had similar scores and therefore are not suitable to distinguish between cultivars within this group. Nonetheless, these 10 descriptors may be useful for distinguishing the East African highland bananas as a group from other groups of bananas. A few descriptors were unique to the cultivar ‘Tereza’ and may be used to distinguish this cultivar from other ‘matooke’ cultivars. None of the quantitative descriptors were stable.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    cultivar; descriptors; bananas; hybridization; plant genetic resources; morphological traits; east african highland bananas; traits; germplasm
    Subjects
    BANANA; GENETIC IMPROVEMENT; PLANT BREEDING; PLANT GENETIC RESOURCES; PLANT PRODUCTION
    Countries
    Uganda
    Regions
    Africa; Eastern Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Institute of Tropical Agriculture; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; EARTH University; Katholieke Universiteit Leuven; Bioversity International
    Collections
    • Bioversity Journal Articles [1060]
    • Effective Genetic Resources Conservation and Use [446]
    • IITA Journal Articles [4999]

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