2018
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy8110272
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Morphological Assessment of Cultivated and Wild Amaranth Species Diversity

Abstract: Amaranthus L. is genus of C4 dicotyledonous herbaceous plants comprising approximately 70 species, with three subgenera, which contains both cultivated and wild types, where cultivated ones are used for food grains, leafy vegetables, potential forages and ornamentals. Grain amaranth are pseudocereals from three species domesticated in North and South America and are notable for containing high amount of protein and minerals and balanced amino acid in their small seeds. Genetic diversity analysis of amaranths i… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Thus, selection for such traits can easily be done. This agrees with the report of [16] that high heritability of characters is an indication that superior genotypes could be reliably selected on the basis of phenotypic performance.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Thus, selection for such traits can easily be done. This agrees with the report of [16] that high heritability of characters is an indication that superior genotypes could be reliably selected on the basis of phenotypic performance.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Comparing species in the vegetative state when plants form the root system and stems with leaves it is determined that A. cruentus passes this period faster by 8-16 days which is a good indicator for temperate climatic conditions of the experiment. These results are compatible with those reported by investigators (Thapa & Blair, 2018;Saratovsky et al, 2018). The same pattern was observed during flowering when the same species A. cruentus bloomed 6-17 days earlier compared to other species that made it possible to grow A. cruentus for grain in these conditions for three years of experiment.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Tailoring higher expression of branching genes could reduce excessive production of lower branches (tillering) by mimicking domestication alleles of teosinte branched 1 (tb1) from maize (93), and larger seeds could result from recreating beneficial alleles of known grain size genes (94,95). Similarly, quinoa and its relative amaranth are pseudocereal orphan crops from the Americas that carry large, heavy inflorescences (96,97). Mutations in the florigen or GA systems could be used to reduce height and support broader geographical distribution.…”
Section: Expanding Agricultural Horizons: Feeding Humans Not Their Livestockmentioning
confidence: 99%