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The coconut palm occupies a significant place in the world economy
as an important subsistence crop in all the areas in which it is
grown. Relatively few countries are able to export any quantity of
coconut products because of increasing home demands coupled with
low productivity. Yields are generally well below potential despite
recent developments with improved planting stock and agronomic
practices. In the last 50 years, both these aspects have received
considerable attention, but the focus is shifting to investigate
how the use of recently developed biotechnological techniques- can
benefit the coconut industry. This volume, the result of the
International Symposium on Coconut Biotechnology (held in December
1997 in Merida, Yucatan, Mexico), describes recent research in
three important areas. Standard plant breeding techniques used with
coconut have produced improved planting material, but progress is
inevitably very slow. Can more rapid genetic improvement be
obtained using molecular techniques? The papers presented in this
section suggest that such techniques will open up exciting new
prospects, but only after basic information has been gathered on
the genetic status of existing coconut stocks. Research using
microsatellite techniques seems to provide a useful tool to help to
classifying these stocks. However, only a combination of classical
breeding methods with modem techniques will lead to the rapid
improvement which is required to supply material for urgent
replanting programs.
The coconut palm occupies a significant place in the world economy
as an important subsistence crop in all the areas in which it is
grown. Relatively few countries are able to export any quantity of
coconut products because of increasing home demands coupled with
low productivity. Yields are generally well below potential despite
recent developments with improved planting stock and agronomic
practices. In the last 50 years, both these aspects have received
considerable attention, but the focus is shifting to investigate
how the use of recently developed biotechnological techniques- can
benefit the coconut industry. This volume, the result of the
International Symposium on Coconut Biotechnology (held in December
1997 in Merida, Yucatan, Mexico), describes recent research in
three important areas. Standard plant breeding techniques used with
coconut have produced improved planting material, but progress is
inevitably very slow. Can more rapid genetic improvement be
obtained using molecular techniques? The papers presented in this
section suggest that such techniques will open up exciting new
prospects, but only after basic information has been gathered on
the genetic status of existing coconut stocks. Research using
microsatellite techniques seems to provide a useful tool to help to
classifying these stocks. However, only a combination of classical
breeding methods with modem techniques will lead to the rapid
improvement which is required to supply material for urgent
replanting programs.
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