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Allozymic, morphological, phenological, linguistic, plant use, and nutritional data on wild and cultivated collections ofLuffa aegyptiaca Mill. (Cucurbitaceae) from Nepal, southern China, and northern Laos

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Abstract

In order to explore the domestication and ethnobotany ofLuffa aegyptiaca, collections were made from two regions where wild plants and the domesticate occur: an area in and near southern China, represented by Yunnan Province (China) and northern Laos; and the Indian subcontinent, represented by southeastern Nepal. The allozyme evidence was inconclusive with respect to the region of domestication due to the small sample size of wild accessions from Nepal but suggests a single place of domestication. Principal Components Analysis of morphological characters revealed that some accessions of the domesticate from Yunnan and Laos were more similar to the wild type than were those from Nepal. Compared to the wild type, the domesticate had nonbitter, larger, and indehiscent fruits, flowered earlier, and had thicker fruit vascular bundles. The nutritional content of traditional cultivars was superior to that of a single modern cultivar that was examined.

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Marr, K.L., Xia, YM. & Bhattarai, N.K. Allozymic, morphological, phenological, linguistic, plant use, and nutritional data on wild and cultivated collections ofLuffa aegyptiaca Mill. (Cucurbitaceae) from Nepal, southern China, and northern Laos. Econ Bot 59, 137–153 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1663/0013-0001(2005)059[0137:AMPLPU]2.0.CO;2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1663/0013-0001(2005)059[0137:AMPLPU]2.0.CO;2

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