Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador. / Chalampuente-Flores, Doris; Mosquera-Losada, María Rosa; Ron, Antonio M.De; Tapia Bastidas, César; Sørensen, Marten.

I: Agronomy, Bind 13, Nr. 8, 2064, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Chalampuente-Flores, D, Mosquera-Losada, MR, Ron, AMD, Tapia Bastidas, C & Sørensen, M 2023, 'Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador', Agronomy, bind 13, nr. 8, 2064. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy13082064

APA

Chalampuente-Flores, D., Mosquera-Losada, M. R., Ron, A. M. D., Tapia Bastidas, C., & Sørensen, M. (2023). Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador. Agronomy, 13(8), [2064]. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy13082064

Vancouver

Chalampuente-Flores D, Mosquera-Losada MR, Ron AMD, Tapia Bastidas C, Sørensen M. Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador. Agronomy. 2023;13(8). 2064. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy13082064

Author

Chalampuente-Flores, Doris ; Mosquera-Losada, María Rosa ; Ron, Antonio M.De ; Tapia Bastidas, César ; Sørensen, Marten. / Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador. I: Agronomy. 2023 ; Bind 13, Nr. 8.

Bibtex

@article{fdf66cd27c0e4284a24e3c015641b320,
title = "Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador",
abstract = "Promoting food security is one of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) proposed by the United Nations General Assembly, with a target date of 2030. Human nutrition based on legume consumption is essential to ensuring food security while reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with nitrogen fertilizer use. Moreover, preserving legume biodiversity is critical to increasing agricultural resilience against climate change. The Andean lupine or “tarwi” (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) is a legume native to the Andean region with high nutritional importance. Morphological characterization processes allow the determination of local agro-biodiversity and the identification of promising materials for genetic improvement programs. In the present investigation, 173 accessions of Andean lupine from the Germplasm Bank of INIAP, Ecuador, were evaluated. Thirteen quantitative and fifteen qualitative descriptors were used in the characterization. The results revealed that the genetic variability of the Andean lupine is represented by the conformation of four groups of accessions. Among those groups, two accessions stand out for having small plants and high yields, factors that could be used for genetic improvement processes or be reintroduced into farmers{\textquoteright} fields as they represent an option for the production, consumption, and marketing of the local germplasm of this relevant ancient crop. A phenotypic diversity map of the cultivated tarwi explained that areas with high morphological diversity are not completely identical to areas with high ecogeographic diversity. The distribution of the genetic variability of species appears to be more related to cultural aspects than environmental conditions.",
keywords = "agrobiodiversity, breeding, germplasm, multivariate analysis, tarwi",
author = "Doris Chalampuente-Flores and Mosquera-Losada, {Mar{\'i}a Rosa} and Ron, {Antonio M.De} and {Tapia Bastidas}, C{\'e}sar and Marten S{\o}rensen",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 by the authors.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3390/agronomy13082064",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Agronomy",
issn = "2073-4395",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Morphological and Ecogeographical Diversity of the Andean Lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) in the High Andean Region of Ecuador

AU - Chalampuente-Flores, Doris

AU - Mosquera-Losada, María Rosa

AU - Ron, Antonio M.De

AU - Tapia Bastidas, César

AU - Sørensen, Marten

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 by the authors.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Promoting food security is one of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) proposed by the United Nations General Assembly, with a target date of 2030. Human nutrition based on legume consumption is essential to ensuring food security while reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with nitrogen fertilizer use. Moreover, preserving legume biodiversity is critical to increasing agricultural resilience against climate change. The Andean lupine or “tarwi” (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) is a legume native to the Andean region with high nutritional importance. Morphological characterization processes allow the determination of local agro-biodiversity and the identification of promising materials for genetic improvement programs. In the present investigation, 173 accessions of Andean lupine from the Germplasm Bank of INIAP, Ecuador, were evaluated. Thirteen quantitative and fifteen qualitative descriptors were used in the characterization. The results revealed that the genetic variability of the Andean lupine is represented by the conformation of four groups of accessions. Among those groups, two accessions stand out for having small plants and high yields, factors that could be used for genetic improvement processes or be reintroduced into farmers’ fields as they represent an option for the production, consumption, and marketing of the local germplasm of this relevant ancient crop. A phenotypic diversity map of the cultivated tarwi explained that areas with high morphological diversity are not completely identical to areas with high ecogeographic diversity. The distribution of the genetic variability of species appears to be more related to cultural aspects than environmental conditions.

AB - Promoting food security is one of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) proposed by the United Nations General Assembly, with a target date of 2030. Human nutrition based on legume consumption is essential to ensuring food security while reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with nitrogen fertilizer use. Moreover, preserving legume biodiversity is critical to increasing agricultural resilience against climate change. The Andean lupine or “tarwi” (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) is a legume native to the Andean region with high nutritional importance. Morphological characterization processes allow the determination of local agro-biodiversity and the identification of promising materials for genetic improvement programs. In the present investigation, 173 accessions of Andean lupine from the Germplasm Bank of INIAP, Ecuador, were evaluated. Thirteen quantitative and fifteen qualitative descriptors were used in the characterization. The results revealed that the genetic variability of the Andean lupine is represented by the conformation of four groups of accessions. Among those groups, two accessions stand out for having small plants and high yields, factors that could be used for genetic improvement processes or be reintroduced into farmers’ fields as they represent an option for the production, consumption, and marketing of the local germplasm of this relevant ancient crop. A phenotypic diversity map of the cultivated tarwi explained that areas with high morphological diversity are not completely identical to areas with high ecogeographic diversity. The distribution of the genetic variability of species appears to be more related to cultural aspects than environmental conditions.

KW - agrobiodiversity

KW - breeding

KW - germplasm

KW - multivariate analysis

KW - tarwi

U2 - 10.3390/agronomy13082064

DO - 10.3390/agronomy13082064

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85168683840

VL - 13

JO - Agronomy

JF - Agronomy

SN - 2073-4395

IS - 8

M1 - 2064

ER -

ID: 366506223