The CIRAD Cotton Germplasm Collection was founded in 1978 through the pooling of a number of working collections. It is one of the largest collections in the world representing genetic variability in the genus Gossypium L. In 2005, it contained 3070 accessions, including 1696 cultivars and 1374 wild and ancestral types, covering five tetraploid species and seven diploid species. The two main cultivated cotton species, G. hirsutum L. and G. barbadense L., accounted for 68% and 15% of the accessions, respectively. The cultivars originated from around a hundred countries, and the ancestral species accessions were collected during expeditions conducted between 1980 and 1988. Part of the ancestral type collection (894 accessions) was assem...
Gossypium barbadense L. is a commercially important cotton species of tropical South American origin...
The CIRAD cotton germplasm collection was founded in 1978 and currently includes 3,070 accessions, o...
For cotton like for most important crops, future improvements of adaptation to adverse environment, ...
The cotton genetic resources managed by CIRAD is located in Montpellier (South of France) and repres...
Co-ordinated efforts to collect and maintain cotton genetic resources have increased over the last 1...
Cotton (Gossypium) has a long history of cultivation in Africa, witnessed by the presence of traditi...
The cultivated Gossypium spp. (cotton) represents the single most important, natural fi ber crop in ...
The Asiatic or A-genome cottons, Gossypium arboreum L. and G. herbaceum L., are potentially importan...
The Old World cotton species Gossypium arboreum (Tree Cotton) and G. herbaceum (Levant Cotton) have ...
We present an overview of the taxonomy of Gossypium L. (the cotton genus) and its evolutionary histo...
The cotton genus (Gossypium ) includes approximately 50 species distributed in arid to semi-arid reg...
Not AvailableThe genus Gossypium which belongs to the family Malvaceae and tribe Gossypieae, include...
A diversity reference set has been constructed for the Gossypium accessions in the U.S. National Cot...
Gossypium hirsutum has a large indigenous range encompassing most of Mesoamerica and the Caribbean, ...
Gossypium hirsutum L., the most important species of cultivated cotton, is a diverse species whose v...
Gossypium barbadense L. is a commercially important cotton species of tropical South American origin...
The CIRAD cotton germplasm collection was founded in 1978 and currently includes 3,070 accessions, o...
For cotton like for most important crops, future improvements of adaptation to adverse environment, ...
The cotton genetic resources managed by CIRAD is located in Montpellier (South of France) and repres...
Co-ordinated efforts to collect and maintain cotton genetic resources have increased over the last 1...
Cotton (Gossypium) has a long history of cultivation in Africa, witnessed by the presence of traditi...
The cultivated Gossypium spp. (cotton) represents the single most important, natural fi ber crop in ...
The Asiatic or A-genome cottons, Gossypium arboreum L. and G. herbaceum L., are potentially importan...
The Old World cotton species Gossypium arboreum (Tree Cotton) and G. herbaceum (Levant Cotton) have ...
We present an overview of the taxonomy of Gossypium L. (the cotton genus) and its evolutionary histo...
The cotton genus (Gossypium ) includes approximately 50 species distributed in arid to semi-arid reg...
Not AvailableThe genus Gossypium which belongs to the family Malvaceae and tribe Gossypieae, include...
A diversity reference set has been constructed for the Gossypium accessions in the U.S. National Cot...
Gossypium hirsutum has a large indigenous range encompassing most of Mesoamerica and the Caribbean, ...
Gossypium hirsutum L., the most important species of cultivated cotton, is a diverse species whose v...
Gossypium barbadense L. is a commercially important cotton species of tropical South American origin...
The CIRAD cotton germplasm collection was founded in 1978 and currently includes 3,070 accessions, o...
For cotton like for most important crops, future improvements of adaptation to adverse environment, ...