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CBN-V Video Archives - S6-24
True Cassava Seed Programme for Food Security in Developing
Countries
Rajendran P.G. and C. Mohan
Central
Tuber Crops Research Institute, Sreekariyam 695 017, Trivandrum,
Kerala, India
pgrajendran@hotmail.com
Cassava has enormous potential for poverty alleviation and food
security due to its ability to grow and yield well in marginal and
waste lands under minimal management. The slow multiplication rate
under clonal propagation, huge bulk of planting material, the quick
spoilage of stems cuttings under storage and the perpetuation of
ocassava mosaic disease (CMD) through infected cuttings are the
major impediments against its cultuvation ,which limit its potential
as a food crop of the rural poor in the developing countries. The
potential of true cassava seed (TCS) programme as a viable
alternative to the conventional clonal propagation has been explored
at the Central Tuber Crops Research Institute, Trivandrum between
1988 and 2002. The following aspects were studied: germplasm
evaluation; seed output and germination among male fertile, male
sterile and inbred and hybrid progenies; seed viability and storage
under diverse conditions; factors influencing seed germination and
sprouting; optimising nursery technique for seedlings; conditions
for seedling establishment in the field; stimulating clonal yield in
the seedlings; CMD incidence among seedlings and clones; yield
potential of seedlings and that of the first clonal progenies (C1)
of promising parents; dry matter, starch and HCN content of tuber at
different stages among seedlings and the first clones in comparison
to the parental clones; effect of growth regulators on seedling
tuber yield and standardization of agro-techniques of seed crop. It
was observed that the multiplication rate increased fifteen folds.
CMD was reduced since it was not transmitted through sexual seeds.
Extensive areas was brought under cultivation with 1.5 kg of sexual
seeds per hectare. True seeds were viable for about 8 months and any
amount of seeds can be stored securely under ambient conditions.
Seed crop of promising parents under closer spacing produced
comparable storage roots, dry matter, starch and HCN content to that
of the clones. Regional adaptive trials indicated that the programme
can be successfully adopted in India.
2007©
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center All rights reserved.
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