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Analysis and evaluation of quality traits of peanut varieties with near Infra-red spectroscopy technology
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Analysis and evaluation of quality traits of peanut varieties with near Infra-red spectroscopy technology

H. Liu, M.K. Pandey, Z. Xu, D. Rao, Z. Huang, M. Chen, D. Feng, R.K. Varshney and Y. Hong
International Journal of Agriculture and Biology, pp.1-8
2019
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In Press Open Access

Abstract

Peanut kernel and oil quality are the important features which decide the market value of the produce. In order to identify better source with good kernel and oil quality for use in breeding program, 21 quality traits of 100 peanut varieties were phenotyped under national official field tests in South China. Some of these traits included were contents of crude fat, protein, fatty acids and amino acids using near infra-red spectroscopy technology. The average contents of crude fat, protein, amino acids, oleic and linoleic in these varieties were found to be 51.37%, 26.31%, 22.611%, 44.84% and 34.05%, respectively. The principal component analysis (PCA) identified three component factors representing 74% variation with the clear-cut grouping of 21 quality traits into these component factors i.e., protein and amino acid (PC1), unsaturated fatty acid (PC2) and crude fat (PC3). Furthermore, the cluster analysis divided these 100 peanut varieties into 4 groups with some differences in the quality traits between groups. It is an effective way to comprehensively evaluate the peanut quality by principal component analysis and cluster analysis, which could not only avoid the bias and the instability of single factor analysis, but also explore a practical distinction way for the peanut quality analysis and the quality breeding.

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