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Reviving African fruit species

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31.01.2008

One resource that could help combat malnutrition and rural poverty in sub-Saharan Africa is largely untapped, says a new report from the National Research Council.

 

Native fruit species that have fed Africans for thousands of years -- such as butterfruit and ebony -- are now largely neglected and displaced by non-native species, leaving the indigenous plants' potential unrealized.


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FRUIT largely species

LOST CROPS OF AFRICA: VOL. 3, FRUITS says that with renewed development and wider cultivation, these plants could offer benefits for food security, economic development, and environmental protection.

The report describes two dozen particularly promising species that should receive more attention and cultivation from horticultural scientists, development organizations, and others.

Sara Frueh | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.nas.edu

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