8 results on '"Kumar, P. Lava"'
Search Results
2. Inheritance of resistance to three endemic viral diseases of cowpea in Nigeria.
- Author
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Ogunsola, K. E., Fatokun, C. A., Boukar, O., and Kumar, P. Lava
- Subjects
COWPEA ,VIRUS diseases ,ENDEMIC diseases ,CUCUMBER mosaic virus ,MONOGENIC & polygenic inheritance (Genetics) ,HEREDITY - Abstract
Mosaic diseases, caused by bean common mosaic virus-blackeye cowpea mosaic strain (BCMV-BlCM), southern bean mosaic virus (SBMV), and cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), hamper the productivity of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.). Under single or mixed infections, these endemic viruses significantly reduce cowpea yield in sub-Saharan Africa. Planting resistant varieties is the most effective control method. Knowledge of the mode of inheritance of viral resistance is crucial in developing resistant varieties. Inheritance of resistance to BCMV-BlCM, SBMV, and CMV was investigated in two improved cowpea breeding lines. For BCMV-BICM, crosses were made between resistant IT97K-1042-3 (female) and susceptible IT99K-1060 (male); for SBMV, between resistant IT98K-1092-1 (male) and susceptible IT99K-1060 (female); and for CMV, between tolerant IT98K-1092-1 (female) and susceptible IT99K-573-1-1 (male). The F
1 progenies were advanced to F2 , and some F1 plants were backcrossed to the two parental lines. Reciprocal crosses were made and the 7-day-old seedlings of P1 , P2 , F1 , F2 , BCP1 , and BCP2 were phenotyped by mechanical inoculation with BCMV-BlCM, SBMV, and CMV under screenhouse conditions. Data on disease incidence and severity were taken at weekly intervals for 5-week post-inoculation. Virus infections were confirmed via antigen-coated plate enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Chi-square analysis of the genetic segregation indicated that a recessive gene pair in IT97K-1042-3 controlled the inheritance of resistance to BCMV-BlCM. Duplicate dominant genes conditioned the resistance to SBMV and tolerance to CMV in IT98K-1092-1. The backcrosses confirmed the monogenic and digenic inheritance patterns, whereas reciprocal crosses indicated absence of cytoplasmic effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Seed Certification and Maize, Rice and Cowpea Productivity in Nigeria: An Insight Based on Nationally Representative Farm Household Data and Seed Company Location Data.
- Author
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Hiroyuki Takeshima, Abdoulaye, Tahirou, Andam, Kwaw S., Edeh, Hyacinth O., Fasoranti, Adetunji, Haile, Beliyou, Kumar, P. Lava, Nwagboso, Chibuzo, Ragasa, Catherine, Spielman, David, and Wossen, Tesfamichael
- Abstract
Despite the potential importance of seed quality to agricultural productivity growth, many governments in sub-Saharan Africa lack the capacity to expand quality assurance systems even where there is expressed interest. This study aims to evidence the value of quality assurance systems with an analysis of efforts to produce and distribute certified seed in Nigeria. We assess the associations between quantities of certified seeds produced and spatial variations in production locations proxied by headquarter locations of seed companies producing certified seeds, on the one hand, with spatial variations in the use of certified seed, yields, and output at the farm level, on the other hand. Our analysis covers three crops that are important to food security in Nigeria: maize, rice, and cowpea. Our analysis integrates information on seed quantities produced and locations of seed companies with nationally representative panel data from a survey of farm households and spatially explicit rainfall and temperature data. We find a positive relationship between certified seed production in proximity to farm households and farm-level use of certified seeds, yields, and output, although this effect is diminishing at the margin. These diminishing marginal effects may be partly due to two factors. First, the yield gains from certified seeds tend to vary considerably within each state, suggesting that either quality issues persist in the seed supply chain or farmers are not using complementary inputs or appropriate management techniques when using quality seed. Second, it may be that as certified seed becomes more available to farmers, its use spreads from higher-return farms to lower-return farms, thereby diminishing the gains on the extensive margin. Although more rigorous assessments of causal effects and cost-effectiveness are needed to validate these findings, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that there are diminishing returns to seed quality assurance. Policymakers, regulators, and seed providers may benefit from identifying optimal, crop-specific target quantities or rates for certified seed production rather than aiming for certification of all seed produced in a market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
4. Disease incidence and severity in cowpea lines evaluated for resistance to single and multiple infections of endemic viruses in Nigeria.
- Author
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Ogunsola, Kayode Ezekiel, Ilori, Christopher, Fatokun, Christian A., Boukar, Ousmane, Ogunsanya, Patricia, and Kumar, P. Lava
- Subjects
COWPEA ,DISEASE incidence ,VIRUS diseases ,CUCUMBER mosaic virus ,COMMON bean - Abstract
Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp) is susceptible to several viruses in West Africa. Cowpea viral diseases are mainly controlled through the use of resistant cultivars. Co-infection with more than one virus is frequent in the fields and the resultant synergistic effect often compromises host resistance identified by screening against individual viruses under field or controlled conditions. In this study, eight improved cowpea breeding lines, identified as resistant to single infections and a susceptible cultivar (Ife Brown), were evaluated for their reactions to single and multiple infections of three viruses endemic in West Africa; viz., bean common mosaic virus-blackeye cowpea mosaic strain (BCMV-BlCM), southern bean mosaic virus (SBMV), and cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). Cowpea seedlings were inoculated with these viruses singly or in combination. Disease incidence and severity were recorded at weekly intervals for eight weeks. Virus infection was confirmed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Systemic mosaic, vein-banding, and stunting were observed on inoculated plants. Mixed infection increased symptom severity and the highest severity was found in plants co-infected with CMV. Phenotyping against mixed-infections was more promising for estimating host resistance response in cowpea than single infections. Based on virus incidence and severity, lines IT97K-1069-6 and IT04K-405-5 were found to be resistant to SBMV, whereas IT99K-1060 and IT98K-503-1 were susceptible to the three viruses. IT-98 K-1092-1 was found to be resistant to BCMV and SBMV and tolerant to CMV under mixed inoculation scenario. Cowpea line IT-98 K-1092-1 is, thus, the best resistance source for use in virus resistance-breeding programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Incidence and diversity of viruses in cowpeas and weeds in the unmanaged farming systems of savanna zones in Nigeria.
- Author
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Odedara, Olusola Olukemi and Kumar, P. Lava
- Subjects
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COWPEA , *BIODIVERSITY , *WEEDS , *PLANT viruses , *SAVANNA plants - Abstract
Fields surveys were conducted to assess the incidence of commonly known legume viruses on cowpeas and weed hosts within and around the cowpeas farms in nine locations across the three agro-ecological zones of Nigeria. Of 315 cowpea leaf samples collected and tested for eight viruses, 69.5% were found to be infected.Bean common mosaic virus-blackeye mosaic (BCMV-BlCM), genusPotyvirushad the highest incidence (70%) and was also the most prevalent (78%).Cowpea aphid-borne mosaic virus(CABMV, genusPotyvirus) had 64% as incidence, incidence ofSouthern bean mosaic virus(SBMV, genusSobemovirus) was 21%.Bean pod mosaic virus(BPMV, genusComovirus) was detected in 1% of the samples tested.Cowpea mosaic virus(CPMV, genusComovirus) was undetected. Other viruses tested includedCowpea mottle virus(CPMoV, genusCarmovirus),Cucumber mosaic virus(CMV, genusCucumovirus), andCowpea mild mottle virus(CPMMV, genusCarlavirus). Multiple virus infections were detected in 68.0% of the infected cowpea leaf samples. The combination of BCMV-BlCM and CABMV was the most common, occurring in 76.4% of all samples. Virus incidence in weeds around the cowpea plots was 2.5% (9 out of 356) whereas 1.5% (5 out of 332) of the weeds collected within the cowpea plots were infected. Some of the weeds infected wereChromoleana odorata, Centrosemasp.,Thithonia diversifoliaandTalinum triangulare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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6. Obituary Pothur Sreenivasulu (1950–2020).
- Author
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Masarapu, Hema, Kumar, P. Lava, Tatineni, Satyanarayana, and Reddy, D. V. R.
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PLANT viruses , *MOSAIC diseases , *LIFE sciences , *VIRUS diseases , *COWPEA - Published
- 2021
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7. Does the informal seed system threaten cowpea seed health?
- Author
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Biemond, P.C., Oguntade, O., Kumar, P. Lava, Stomph, T.J., Termorshuizen, A.J., and Struik, P.C.
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COWPEA ,PLANTING ,SEED quality ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SEED production (Botany) ,FUSARIUM oxysporum ,PLANT species ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Abstract: Most smallholder farmers in developing countries depend on an informal Seed System (SS) for their seed. The informal SS is often criticized because farmer-produced seed samples are not tested for seed health, thus accepting the risk of planting infected seeds. Here we aimed at assessing the quality of seeds acquired from the informal SS, and compared this with the quality of seeds obtained from the formal SS. Cowpea seed production in northern Nigeria was used as a case study to evaluate the seed health of samples from farmers, seed companies, and foundation seed producers. In two years, a total of 45,500 seeds from 91 seed samples from 43 sources (farmers, seed companies and research) were tested for seed-borne bacteria and fungi by plating disinfested seed onto an agar medium. The most commonly isolated plant pathogens were Fusarium oxysporum (69% of the samples), Macrophomina phaseolina (76%) and Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola (48%). The infection incidence, the percentage of seeds infected per sample, varied from 0.2 to 75.6%. F. oxysporum had a median infection incidence of 9% in 2009 and 25% in 2010, while M. phaseolina had a median infection between 4 and 10%. On average, 8.8 species per sample were isolated from foundation seed, 9.2 from farmer-produced seed and 9.8 from seed companies'' seed. No evidence was found that seed recycling in the informal SS did lead to increased levels of seed-borne pathogens. In contrast to farmers, seed companies distribute seed over large distances, and therefore form a potential threat for spreading diseases at relatively large scale. Responsible authorities are recommended to make seed dressing mandatory for all seeds sold by seed companies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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8. Inheritance of Pod Length and Other Yield Components in Two Cowpea and Yard-Long Bean Crosses.
- Author
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Edematie, Victoria E., Fatokun, Christian, Boukar, Ousmane, Adetimirin, Victor O., and Kumar, P. Lava
- Subjects
COWPEA ,BEANS ,SEED yield ,SEED pods ,PLANT yields - Abstract
This study determined the gene effects involved in the inheritance of pod length and other yield-related traits and relationships among traits in crosses between two cowpea lines (TVu 2280 and TVu 2027) and a yard-long bean (TVu 6642) line with long pods. Plants of six generations (P
1 , P2 , F1 , F2 , BC1 P1 , and BC1 P2 ) derived from TVu 2280 × TVu 6642 and TVu 2027 × TVu 6642 were evaluated under field conditions. Data collected on 14 yield components of each cross were used for generation mean analysis. Gene effects and their magnitudes varied with the crosses; digenic epistatic gene effects were detected for 10 traits in TVu 2280 × TVu 6642 and 11 traits in TVu 2280 × TVu 6642. Only additive gene effect was significant for pod length in TVu 2280 × TVu 6642 while additive, dominant, and two of the three digenic epistatic gene effects were significant in TVu 2027 × TVu 6642. Models that incorporated only significant additive, dominant, and digenic epistasis were adequate for all 14 traits in TVu 2280 × TVu 6642 and eight of the 12 traits in TVu 2027 × TVu 6642 for which model-fitting was possible. Across segregating generation of the two crosses, pod length (PodLNT) was significantly (p < 0.001) correlated with three major yield components viz. pod weight (0.84, 0.77), number of seeds per pod (0.41, 0.30) and seed weight per pod (0.61, 0.29). Significant correlation of PodLNT with seed yield per plant was moderate and significant (p < 0.01–0.001) in the BC1 P1 of the two crosses (0.31 and 0.41). An improvement in cowpea seed yield is feasible through selection for long pods in segregating generations involving crosses with yard-long bean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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