Most popular articles
Everything About Peaches. Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service Everything About Peaches Website: whether you are a professional or backyard peach...
Mission Statement. For the sake of mankind and the world as a whole a further increase of the sustainability...
Newsletter 9: July 2013 - Temperate Fruits in the Tropics and Subtropics. Download your copy of the Working Group Temperate...
USA Walnut varieties. The Walnut Germplasm Collection of the University of California, Davis (USA). A description of the Collection and a History...
China Walnut varieties.

Articles

SWEETPOTATO PRODUCTION WORLDWIDE: ASSESSMENT, TRENDS AND THE FUTURE

Article number
670_2
Pages
19 – 25
Language
English
Abstract
The sweetpotato is the 7th most important food crop worldwide.
When contrasted with other major staple food crops, the sweetpotato has a diverse range of positive attributes: high yield (kg•ha-1•day-1), nutritional value (e.g., vitamins, nutriceuticals, glycemic index, dietary fiber), production geography, length of production cycle, and resistance to production stresses (high temperature, water deficit, insect and disease pressure, low fertility). Over the past 42 years, sweetpotato production worldwide has remained static, even though the world population has essentially doubled; hence the consumption per capita has progressively declined.
Sweetpotato has been and continues to be bypassed as a preferred food source for the world’s expanding population.
When contrasted with rice, it is evident that the lack of increased production of the sweetpotato is not due to an inability to grow the crop but rather in its utilization.
Plant breeding represents the most expedient avenue for addressing deficiencies in the crop that modulate utilization.
Critical breeding objectives should be: 1) decreasing the cost per kg of usable product; and 2) improving the flavor and acceptability of the sweetpotato as a human food.

Publication
Authors
S.J. Kays
Keywords
flavor, quality, rice, potato, cassava, population, utilization, consumption, nutritional attributes, processed products.
Full text
Online Articles (26)
R.A. Genet | R.E. Falloon | W.F. Braam | A.R. Wallace | J.M.E. Jacobs | S.J. Baldwin
J.A. Douglas | M.H. Douglas | B. Deo | J.M. Follett | J.J.C. Scheffer | I.M. Sims | R.A.S. Welch
R.J. Martin | G.P. Savage | B. Deo | S.R.P. Halloy | P.J. Fletcher
B.P. Searle | P. Jarvis | R.J. Lucas
R.J. Martin | J.J.C. Scheffer | B. Deo | S.R.P. Halloy