Vitamin A deficiency is a serious public health problem in Zambia and the existing means for addressing the problem are inadequate. The problem is manifest especially in young children and lactating mothers. Sweetpotato is a potential crop for alleviating vitamin A deficiency as some of the genotypes contain high levels of β-carotene recognised by the orange flesh. However, most of the genotypes grown in Zambia are white fleshed hence low in β-carotene. The research presented in this book was conducted as a contribution to the alleviation of vitamin A deficiency in Zambia by bio fortification of sweetpotatoes. The goal of this research was to improve the quantity of β-carotene of the high dry mass local sweetpotato cultivars through hybridisation with the high β-carotene content introduced genotypes. Two high β-carotene parents exhibited positive high general combining ability effects, indicating that additive gene effects were predominant in the inheritance of β-carotene. Reciprocal mean squares were significant (p=0.01) for β-carotene content. The estimate of narrow sense heritability of β-carotene (20.9%) was much lower. These results suggest that genetic gains will be slow for
Orange Fleshed Sweetpotato: A contributor to health (Paperback)
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Book format
Paperback
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
Juvenile Nonfiction
Publication date
October, 2011
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