Resumen:
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[EN] Indian melon ( Cucumis melo L.) landraces comprise a wealth of genetic diversity
that has been exploited over the millennia by farmers arid over the last century by
scientifically trained plant scientists in the ...[+]
[EN] Indian melon ( Cucumis melo L.) landraces comprise a wealth of genetic diversity
that has been exploited over the millennia by farmers arid over the last century by
scientifically trained plant scientists in the public and private sectors. Melons in
India may be feral or cultivated, have netted or smooth rinds, be sweet and eaten
as a dessert fruit or not sweet and consumed as a vegeta ble fresh, cooked, or dried.
The fruit may be processed for sweet juice and confectionary flavoring, and the
seeds are a source of high-quality cooking oil and high-protein seed meal. This
chapter reviews genetic variation for resistance to fungal, bacterial, and viral
diseases and to nematodes and insects; and tolerance to soil salinity, drought,
tlooding, and high temperatures with a focus on melon accessions of Indian
origins. Sorne of these resistances have knowing or unknowingly been transferred
through scientifically based breeding programs into open-pollinated and
hybrid sweet melon cultivars grown iii Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and the
Americas for domestic and export markets. Indian melons include unique
sources of high acidity and sugar:acid ratio that enable breeding for new combinations of sweet and sour flavors for fresh and processed melon products.
Genetic variation in carotenoids (f3-carotene), ascorbic acid, and micronutrient
(Fe and Zn) contents in Indian germplasm promise more nutritious melons. High
percentages ofunique alleles are present in southern (24.2%) and eastern (30.4 % )
Indian landraces and in "wild" accessions from northern India (34.5%). Extensiva
collection, preservation, and evaluation of Indian melon landraces is vital
to prevent further genetic erosion in this primary center of melon diversity, to
increase genetic variability for melon breeding, and to introduce new traits into
modern melon cultivars. International collaborations are developing genomics
tools for melon that will facilitate allele mining within Indian germplasm and
introduce new genetic variability. We are on the verga of an exciting era of melon
genetic improvement as whole-plant breeding and genomics technologies combine
to preserve and fully characterize the complete array of genetic variability in
melon and exploit that germplasm and information for the further improvement
of salad and dessert melons for diversa markets worldwide.
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