Food security potential of bottle gourd [Lagenaria siceraria (Molina Standly)] landraces : an agronomic perspective.
Date
2014
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Abstract
Issues surrounding food security of rural households in sub-Saharan Africa have become topical
in the recent years due to low food production and poverty combined with increasing population
which often leads to malnutrition. The marginal nature of agricultural land in these areas,
combined with the predicted effects of climate change, challenges the existence of major crops
and their potential to ensure food security in future. This has led to renewed efforts to re-instate
neglected underutilised species (NUS) such as bottle gourd, because of their likely adaptability to
marginal areas of agricultural production. The objective of the study was to evaluate the potential
of bottle gourd [Lagenaria siceraria (Molina Standly)] as a future food security crop, focussing
on the agronomic perspective. Four separate experiments on seed quality, controlled environment
determination of water stress, field trials to determine yield and laboratory determination of
nutritional value were conducted. Bottle gourd landraces were compared with two commercial
pumpkin cultivars and one cucumber in an effort to benchmark the crop with popular related
conventional crops. Seeds of landraces were collected from farmers’ fields and those of
commercial varieties were sourced from a local seed company. Results of seed quality showed
variability with respect to viability and vigour. Despite this variability, it was found that seed
quality of landraces was comparable to that of commercial hybrids. Under controlled
environment conditions, for all water treatments, stomatal conductance (SC) was observed to be
significantly (P < 0.05) lower in landraces than commercial varieties. This led to the conclusion
that landraces demonstrated a characteristic of potentially efficient water use, which might be
associated with drought tolerance. Under field conditions, the yield of all varieties was found to
be significantly (P < 0.05) higher during summer than winter season. Landraces had higher
(P<0.05) yield than hybrid varieties in summer. The results of nutritional analyses revealed that
bottle gourd was well endowed with most of the nutrients required for good health. Hybrid
varieties contained more (P < 0.05) nutrients than landraces. Although landraces were found to
have lower levels of nutrients than hybrids, they were found to contribute significantly higher
percentages to Daily Recommended Allowances (RDA). Sequential harvesting showed that the
best time to harvest leaves was before the onset of flowering. The study concluded that although
bottle gourd landraces were often inferior to hybrids, they remain an important germplasm
resource with potential to contribute to future food security in marginal production areas of South
Africa.
Description
M. Sc. Agric. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 2014.
Keywords
Lagenaria siceraria -- Seeds -- Quality., Lagenaria siceraria -- Varieties., Lagenaria siceraria -- Yields., Lagenaria siceraria -- Effect of water levels on., Nutrition -- Evaluation., Theses -- Crop science.