Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species

Peanut, also known as groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.), is a native new world crop. Arachis species originated in South America and are found in tropical and subtropical areas. Eighty-one species have been named (Krapovickas and Gregory, 1994; Valls and Simpson, 2005; Valls et al., 2013), including...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stalker, H. Thomas, Tallury, Shyamalrau P., Seijo, Guillermo R., Leal Bertioli, Soraya C.
Formato: parte de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://repositorio.unne.edu.ar/handle/123456789/30849
Aporte de:
id I48-R184-123456789-30849
record_format dspace
spelling I48-R184-123456789-308492025-03-06T11:57:42Z Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species Stalker, H. Thomas Tallury, Shyamalrau P. Seijo, Guillermo R. Leal Bertioli, Soraya C. Stalker, H. Thomas Wilson, Richard F. Arachis Center of origin Disease resistance Interspecific hybrids Peanut Speciation Species Peanut, also known as groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.), is a native new world crop. Arachis species originated in South America and are found in tropical and subtropical areas. Eighty-one species have been named (Krapovickas and Gregory, 1994; Valls and Simpson, 2005; Valls et al., 2013), including the domesticated peanut, A. hypogaea L. Species have evolved in highly diverse habitats and both annual and perennial types exist. New species are being discovered in areas that previously were very difficult to reach because of poor roads and transportation. It is likely that the genus originated in the highlands in the southwestern Mato Grosso do Sul region of Brazil close to Gran Pantanal where the most ancient species of the genus (Arachis guaranitica Chodat. and Hassl. and Arachis tuberosa Bong. Ex Benth.) are found (Gregory et al., 1980; Simpson and Faries, 2001). Subsequently, as the planalto continued to be uplifted coupled with water flow, the genus spread into the drier lowlands of South America (Gregory and Gregory, 1979; Stalker and Simpson, 1995; Simpson et al., 2001). The genus likely originated in tropical wetland areas and subsequently adapted for survival in dry environments. 2022-02-14T13:24:30Z 2022-02-14T13:24:30Z 2016 parte de libro Stalker, H. Thomas, et al., 2016. Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species. En: Stalker, H. Thomas y Wilson, Richard F., ed. Peanuts: genetics, processing, and utilization. Ámsterdam: Elsevier, p. 27-66. ISBN 9781630670382. 9781630670382 http://repositorio.unne.edu.ar/handle/123456789/30849 eng http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-1-63067-038-2.00002-2 restrictedAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ar/ application/pdf p. 27-66 application/pdf Elsevier
institution Universidad Nacional del Nordeste
institution_str I-48
repository_str R-184
collection RIUNNE - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Nacional del Nordeste (UNNE)
language Inglés
topic Arachis
Center of origin
Disease resistance
Interspecific hybrids
Peanut
Speciation
Species
spellingShingle Arachis
Center of origin
Disease resistance
Interspecific hybrids
Peanut
Speciation
Species
Stalker, H. Thomas
Tallury, Shyamalrau P.
Seijo, Guillermo R.
Leal Bertioli, Soraya C.
Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
topic_facet Arachis
Center of origin
Disease resistance
Interspecific hybrids
Peanut
Speciation
Species
description Peanut, also known as groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.), is a native new world crop. Arachis species originated in South America and are found in tropical and subtropical areas. Eighty-one species have been named (Krapovickas and Gregory, 1994; Valls and Simpson, 2005; Valls et al., 2013), including the domesticated peanut, A. hypogaea L. Species have evolved in highly diverse habitats and both annual and perennial types exist. New species are being discovered in areas that previously were very difficult to reach because of poor roads and transportation. It is likely that the genus originated in the highlands in the southwestern Mato Grosso do Sul region of Brazil close to Gran Pantanal where the most ancient species of the genus (Arachis guaranitica Chodat. and Hassl. and Arachis tuberosa Bong. Ex Benth.) are found (Gregory et al., 1980; Simpson and Faries, 2001). Subsequently, as the planalto continued to be uplifted coupled with water flow, the genus spread into the drier lowlands of South America (Gregory and Gregory, 1979; Stalker and Simpson, 1995; Simpson et al., 2001). The genus likely originated in tropical wetland areas and subsequently adapted for survival in dry environments.
author2 Stalker, H. Thomas
author_facet Stalker, H. Thomas
Stalker, H. Thomas
Tallury, Shyamalrau P.
Seijo, Guillermo R.
Leal Bertioli, Soraya C.
format parte de libro
author Stalker, H. Thomas
Tallury, Shyamalrau P.
Seijo, Guillermo R.
Leal Bertioli, Soraya C.
author_sort Stalker, H. Thomas
title Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
title_short Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
title_full Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
title_fullStr Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
title_full_unstemmed Biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
title_sort biology, speciation, and utilization of peanut species
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2022
url http://repositorio.unne.edu.ar/handle/123456789/30849
work_keys_str_mv AT stalkerhthomas biologyspeciationandutilizationofpeanutspecies
AT talluryshyamalraup biologyspeciationandutilizationofpeanutspecies
AT seijoguillermor biologyspeciationandutilizationofpeanutspecies
AT lealbertiolisorayac biologyspeciationandutilizationofpeanutspecies
_version_ 1832345384799698944