Authors
Petr Smýkal, Clarice J Coyne, Mike J Ambrose, Nigel Maxted, Hanno Schaefer, Matthew W Blair, Jens Berger, Stephanie L Greene, Matthew N Nelson, Naghmeh Besharat, Tomáš Vymyslický, Cengiz Toker, Rachit K Saxena, Manish Roorkiwal, Manish K Pandey, Jinguo Hu, Ying H Li, Li X Wang, Yong Guo, Li J Qiu, Robert J Redden, Rajeev K Varshney
Publication date
2015/6/1
Source
Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences
Volume
34
Issue
1-3
Pages
43-104
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
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 bean, lentil, chickpea and pea in the Fertile Crescent of the Near East; cowpeas and bambara groundnut in Africa; soybean and mungbeans in East Asia; pigeonpea …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P Smýkal, CJ Coyne, MJ Ambrose, N Maxted… - Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences, 2015