Review of tea (Camellia sinensis) breeding and selection in southern Africa

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Authors

Nyirenda, H.E.
Mpangwe, N.I.K.

Journal Title

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Volume Title

Publisher

International Society of Tea Science (ISTS)

Abstract

Historically tea seeds were imported into Southern Africa that belonged to either the sinensis or assamica varieties. Later on vegetatively propagated hybrid cultivars selected from F, progeny raised from a deliberate hybridization programme between selected parents with desirable characteristics on the basis of quality and yield related parameters have been used in establishing tea plantations. New high throughput screening methods including biochemical and molecular markers are being investigated to improve the selection process and eliminate genotypes with poor quality potential before the expensive mini manufacture stage. A call is made for the establishment of a Global Tea Research Project to address common problems.

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This item was scanned with a HP 4850 Scanjet at 300 dpi and consists of 7 pages.

Keywords

Camellia sinensis, HPLC chromotography, Leaf color, Chlorophyll fluorescence, Elite mother bushes, Cultivars, Breeding and selection, Hybrid cultivars, Genotypes

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Citation

Apostolides, Z, Nyirenda, HE & Mpangwe, NIK 2006, 'Review of Tea (Camelia sinensis) Breeding and Selection in Southern Africa', International Journal of Tea Science, vol. 5, no. 1&2, pp. 13-19.