Economically, legumes (Fabaceae) represent the second most important family of crop plants after the grass family, Poaceae. Grain legumes account for 27% of world crop production and provide 33% of the dietary protein consumed by humans, while pasture and forage legumes provide vital part of animal feed. Fabaceae, the third largest family of flowering plants, has traditionally been divided into the following three subfamilies: Caesalpinioideae, Mimosoideae, and Papilionoideae, all together with 800 genera and 20,000 species. The latter subfamily contains most of the major cultivated food and feed crops. Among the grain legumes are some of mankind's earliest crop plants, whose domestication parallelled that of cereals: Soybean in China; faba...
Grain legumes contribute significantly to total world food production. Legumes are the primary sourc...
The following cultivated crop species, chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.), lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.)...
Our agricultural system and hence food security is threatened by combination of events, such as incr...
Economically, legumes (Fabaceae) represent the second most important family of crop plants after the...
Legumes have played an important part as human food and animal feed in cropping systems since the da...
Following a brief introduction on the phylogeny, taxonomy, production, uses, diseases, pests, enviro...
Legumes have played an important part in cropping systems since the dawn of agriculture, both as hum...
Grain legumes form an important component of the human diet, feed for livestock and replenish soil f...
Domestication is a dynamic and ongoing process of transforming wild species into cultivated species ...
Legumes (Fabaceae, formerly Leguminosae) are a diverse, widely dis-tributed, and economically import...
Crop domestication is a co-evolutionary process that has rendered plants and animals significantly d...
Plant domestication is evolution in a human-made environment. A diversity “bottleneck” changed the s...
Grain legumes, including common-bean, chickpea, pigeonpea, pea, cowpea, lentil and others, form impo...
Plant domestication is evolution in a human-made environment. A diversity “bottleneck” changed the...
Our agricultural system and hence food security is threatened by combination of events, such as incr...
Grain legumes contribute significantly to total world food production. Legumes are the primary sourc...
The following cultivated crop species, chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.), lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.)...
Our agricultural system and hence food security is threatened by combination of events, such as incr...
Economically, legumes (Fabaceae) represent the second most important family of crop plants after the...
Legumes have played an important part as human food and animal feed in cropping systems since the da...
Following a brief introduction on the phylogeny, taxonomy, production, uses, diseases, pests, enviro...
Legumes have played an important part in cropping systems since the dawn of agriculture, both as hum...
Grain legumes form an important component of the human diet, feed for livestock and replenish soil f...
Domestication is a dynamic and ongoing process of transforming wild species into cultivated species ...
Legumes (Fabaceae, formerly Leguminosae) are a diverse, widely dis-tributed, and economically import...
Crop domestication is a co-evolutionary process that has rendered plants and animals significantly d...
Plant domestication is evolution in a human-made environment. A diversity “bottleneck” changed the s...
Grain legumes, including common-bean, chickpea, pigeonpea, pea, cowpea, lentil and others, form impo...
Plant domestication is evolution in a human-made environment. A diversity “bottleneck” changed the...
Our agricultural system and hence food security is threatened by combination of events, such as incr...
Grain legumes contribute significantly to total world food production. Legumes are the primary sourc...
The following cultivated crop species, chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.), lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.)...
Our agricultural system and hence food security is threatened by combination of events, such as incr...