“…In sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, sorghum is grown primarily as a food crop by small-scale subsistence farmers in some of the world's most fragile agroecosystems. In other parts of the world, sorghum is principally grown as an animal feed, although there is a growing interest in recent years to use it in food products driven by its potential human health benefits (Awika and Rooney, 2004;Lemlioglu-Austin, 2014;Dahlberg et al, 2011;Stefoska-Needham et al, 2015) and as a celiac-safe grain (Ciacci et al, 2007;Pontieri et al, 2013). Over the last decade, sorghum has found new use as feedstock for biofuel production (Dahlberg et al, 2011;Ratnavathi et al, 2011), with nearly one-third of grain sorghum going to the ethanol industry.…”