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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Taro (Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott) is a vegetative propagated tropical root occupying the 9th position among world food
crops. Taro is an important staple food for many local populations of Asia and Africa. The crop is dependent of wet and highly
irrigated growth conditions. Under the scenario of undergoing climatic changes, is estimated that taro production could decrease
in the next 30 years as result of drought constraints. The project EU Aid Taro, DCI-Food/2009/45 “adapting propagated crops to
climatic and commercial changes” aims to study ways to adapt this clonally propagated root to these climatic changes.
A set of drought stress assays were realized at ISOPlexis Genebank (Madeira University), using local taro cultivars
(Macaronesian taro genepool) and elite cultivars and seedlings provided by the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC). The
1st pilot assay was realized in a small greenhouse, included 3 local cultivars and aimed to modelate the wattering regimes and
their influence on crop growth. The 2nd full assay was realized in two greenhouses, during a full plant growth cycle. Thirty four
taro cultivars, 15 elite lines provided by SPC, and 19 local cultivars, from Madeira (10), Canary Islands (6), Azores (2), and
Cyprus (1) were screened. Plants were individually cultivated in pots under 2 contrasting wattering regimes, high (0,36 liters/day)
and low (0,18 liters/day ). Data for 14 morpho-agronomic traits, biomass and yield parameters were collected from 5 plants for
each cultivar, per treatment.
Description
Keywords
Taro (Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott) Drought stress Stress Susceptibility Index Water use efficiency Harvest Index . Escola Superior de Tecnologias e Gestão Faculdade de Ciências da Vida
Citation
Ganança, J. F. T., Freitas, J. G. F., Nóbrega, H. G. M., Rodrigues, V., Antunes, G., Rodrigues, M., ... & Lebot, V. (2015). Screening of elite and local taro (Colocasia esculenta) cultivars for drought tolerance. Procedia Environmental Sciences, 29, 41-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.proenv.2015.07.146
Publisher
Elsevier