An orphan crop

Yam: an orphan crop,

vital yet disregarded.

Gene map may assist.

 

Yams are a stable tuber crop in tropical Africa yet their cultivation has been constrained due to little interest from the rest of the world, their susceptibility to pests and diseases, and their awkward propagation. As such they can be referred to as an “orphan crop that would benefit from crop improvement efforts”.

To help the humble yam’s lot, researchers have sequenced the genome of the white Guinea yam (Tamiru et al, 2017). The research has revealed that yams belong to a unique genus (Dioscorea) that is distinct from rice, palm and banana groups. Yams have separate male and female plants (a limiting factor for yam breeding efforts) but the research has now revealed that yams use female heterogametic sex determination – unlike our XX females and XY males, yams have ZZ males and ZW females meaning that it’s the female gamete that determines the sex of individual offspring. The research hopes to assist yam breeding and cultivation efforts as well as improve food security and sustainability.

Original research: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-017-0419-x

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