The importance of conserving Mexico's tomato agrodiversity to research plant biochemistry under different climates

Sandoval-Ceballos, M.G. and Kalungwana, N.A. and Griffin, J.H.C. and Martínez-Guerra, G. and Ramírez-Ramírez, I. and Maldonado-Peralta, R. and Marshall, L. and Bosch, C. and Cruz-Huerta, N. and Gonzalez-Santos, R. and León, P. and Chávez-Servia, J.L. and González-Hernández, V.A. and Phelps, J. and Toledo-Ortiz, G. (2021) The importance of conserving Mexico's tomato agrodiversity to research plant biochemistry under different climates. Plants, People, Planet, 3 (6). pp. 703-709. ISSN 2572-2611

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Abstract

Tomatoes are important to agriculture, human nutrition and cuisines globally. However, many commercial tomato varieties, including the saladette that dominates the North American market, are highly sensitive to environmental changes that impact yields and critical biochemical pathways including carotenoids and isoprenoids that influence nutritional content and flavour. We highlight the potential of tomato agrodiversity, notably its genetic diversity, as an undervalued research tool for understanding environmental regulation of plant biochemistry under different climates. Yet, tomato genetic diversity in Mexico, the major centre of tomato domestication, is not formally described or protected. We propose that transdisciplinary efforts are essential to identify, conserve and research these globally significant genetic resources.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Plants, People, Planet
Subjects:
?? carotenoidsconservationgenetic resourcesmexicotransdisciplinary ??
ID Code:
158901
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
14 Sep 2021 10:42
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 21:54