Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14724
Title: Convergent Adaptations: Bitter Manioc Cultivation Systems in Fertile Anthropogenic Dark Earths and Floodplain Soils in Central Amazonia
Authors: Fraser, James A.
Alves-Pereira, Alessandro
Junqueira, André Braga
Peroni, Nivaldo
Clement, Charles Roland
Keywords: Starch
Adaptation
Agricultural Procedures
Agricultural Worker
Agroecosystem
Amazonian
Anthropogenic Dark Earth Soil
Bitter Manioc Cultivation System
Cassava
Convergent Adaptation
Cropping System
Ethnic Group
Farming System
Floodplain Soil
Genetic Screening
Microenvironment
Nutrient
River
Soil Analysis
Soil Chemistry
Soil Fertility
Soil Property
Adaptation, Physiological
Agriculture
Biodiversity
Floods
Manihot
Soil
South America
Taste
Trees
Manihot Esculenta
Issue Date: 2012
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: PLoS ONE
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 7, Número 8
Abstract: Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one type: long-fallow shifting cultivation. While it is a typical adaptation to the highly-weathered nutrient-poor soils of the Amazonian terra firme, fertile environments in the region offer opportunities for agricultural intensification. We hypothesized that Amazonian people have developed divergent bitter manioc cultivation systems as adaptations to the properties of different soils. We compared bitter manioc cultivation in two nutrient-rich and two nutrient-poor soils, along the middle Madeira River in Central Amazonia. We interviewed 249 farmers in 6 localities, sampled their manioc fields, and carried out genetic analysis of bitter manioc landraces. While cultivation in the two richer soils at different localities was characterized by fast-maturing, low-starch manioc landraces, with shorter cropping periods and shorter fallows, the predominant manioc landraces in these soils were generally not genetically similar. Rather, predominant landraces in each of these two fertile soils have emerged from separate selective trajectories which produced landraces that converged for fast-maturing low-starch traits adapted to intensified swidden systems in fertile soils. This contrasts with the more extensive cultivation systems found in the two poorer soils at different localities, characterized by the prevalence of slow-maturing high-starch landraces, longer cropping periods and longer fallows, typical of previous studies. Farmers plant different assemblages of bitter manioc landraces in different soils and the most popular landraces were shown to exhibit significantly different yields when planted in different soils. Farmers have selected different sets of landraces with different perceived agronomic characteristics, along with different fallow lengths, as adaptations to the specific properties of each agroecological micro-environment. These findings open up new avenues for research and debate concerning the origins, evolution, history and contemporary cultivation of bitter manioc in Amazonia and beyond. © 2012 Fraser et al.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043636
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