نتایج جستجو برای: cacao

تعداد نتایج: 2496  

Journal: :PloS one 2016
Yasmin Abou Rajab Christoph Leuschner Henry Barus Aiyen Tjoa Dietrich Hertel

One of the main drivers of tropical forest loss is their conversion to oil palm, soy or cacao plantations with low biodiversity and greatly reduced carbon storage. Southeast Asian cacao plantations are often established under shade tree cover, but are later converted to non-shaded monocultures to avoid resource competition. We compared three co-occurring cacao cultivation systems (3 replicate s...

Journal: :Genetics and molecular research : GMR 2010
M A Lopes B T Hora C V Dias G C Santos K P Gramacho J C M Cascardo A S Gesteira F Micheli

Cacao (Theobroma cacao) is one of the most important tropical crops; however, production is threatened by numerous pathogens, including the hemibiotrophic fungus Moniliophthora perniciosa, which causes witches' broom disease. To understand the mechanisms that lead to the development of this disease in cacao, we focused our attention on cacao transcription factors (TFs), which act as master regu...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2007
John S Henderson Rosemary A Joyce Gretchen R Hall W Jeffrey Hurst Patrick E McGovern

Chemical analyses of residues extracted from pottery vessels from Puerto Escondido in what is now Honduras show that cacao beverages were being made there before 1000 B.C., extending the confirmed use of cacao back at least 500 years. The famous chocolate beverage served on special occasions in later times in Mesoamerica, especially by elites, was made from cacao seeds. The earliest cacao bever...

2018
Andrew S. Fister Lena Landherr Siela N. Maximova Mark J. Guiltinan

Theobroma cacao, the source of cocoa, suffers significant losses to a variety of pathogens resulting in reduced incomes for millions of farmers in developing countries. Development of disease resistant cacao varieties is an essential strategy to combat this threat, but is limited by sources of genetic resistance and the slow generation time of this tropical tree crop. In this study, we present ...

Journal: :Bioscience, biotechnology, and biochemistry 2011
Yumiko Sannohe Shuichi Gomi Takashi Murata Makoto Ohyama Kumiko Yonekura Minoru Kanegae Jinichiro Koga

Cacao beans are composed of cacao nibs and germs. Although numerous chemical and physiological studies on cacao nib compounds have been reported, there is little information on cacao germ compounds. We therefore analyzed an extract from the cacao germ, and found two compounds that were specific to the germ. One of these two compounds was identified as the new glycosylated abscisic acid metaboli...

Journal: :Mycological research 2009
Bryan A Bailey Mary D Strem Delilah Wood

Trichoderma species are usually considered soil organisms that colonize plant roots, sometimes forming a symbiotic relationship. Recent studies demonstrate that Trichoderma species are also capable of colonizing the above ground tissues of Theobroma cacao (cacao) in what has been characterized as an endophytic relationship. Trichoderma species can be re-isolated from surface sterilized cacao st...

Journal: :Fungal biology 2012
Gary J Samuels Adnan Ismaiel Ade Rosmana Muhammad Junaid David Guest Peter McMahon Philip Keane Agus Purwantara Smilja Lambert Marianela Rodriguez-Carres Marc A Cubeta

Vascular Streak Dieback (VSD) disease of cacao (Theobroma cacao) in Southeast Asia and Melanesia is caused by a basidiomycete (Ceratobasidiales) fungus Oncobasidium theobromae (syn. =Thanatephorus theobromae). The most characteristic symptoms of the disease are green-spotted leaf chlorosis or, commonly since about 2004, necrotic blotches, followed by senescence of leaves beginning on the second...

2012
Evert Thomas Maarten van Zonneveld Judy Loo Toby Hodgkin Gea Galluzzi Jacob van Etten

Cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) is indigenous to the Amazon basin, but is generally believed to have been domesticated in Mesoamerica for the production of chocolate beverage. However, cacao's distribution of genetic diversity in South America is also likely to reflect pre-Columbian human influences that were superimposed on natural processes of genetic differentiation. Here we present the results o...

2006
Dapeng Zhang Sue Mischke Ricardo Goenaga Alaa A. Hemeida James A. Saunders

Microsatellite-based DNA fingerprinting has been increasingly applied to cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) genotype identification. However, the accuracy and reliability of using high throughput microsatellite analysis for cacao clone identification have not yet been rigorously assessed. Despite the use of highly robust fingerprinting protocols, cacao genotype identification has been affected by genot...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1984
L Restaino J J Myron L M Lenovich S Bills K Tscherneff

With an initial microbial level of ca. 10 microorganisms per g of Ivory Coast cacao beans, 5 kGy of gamma radiation under an atmosphere of air reduced the microflora per g by 2.49 and 3.03 logs at temperatures of 35 and 50 degrees C, respectively. Bahia cacao beans were artificially contaminated with dried spores of Aspergillus flavus and Penicillium citrinum, giving initial fungal levels of 1....

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید