Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia

Wild edible fruit species are commonly consumed and utilized in different parts of Ethiopia for staple food, filling seasonal food shortages, emergency food during a famine, and household income generation. There is a pressing need for domestication and improvement of some wild edible fruits for inc...

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Main Authors: Alebel Melaku, Mohammed Ahmed Ebrahim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2021-01-01
Series:International Journal of Forestry Research
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8538188
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spelling doaj-b90d79f31f664884b2cda3170186fe8f2021-10-04T01:58:02ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Forestry Research1687-93762021-01-01202110.1155/2021/8538188Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in EthiopiaAlebel Melaku0Mohammed Ahmed Ebrahim1College of Agriculture and Natural Resource Debre Markos UniversityCollege of Agriculture and Natural ResourceWild edible fruit species are commonly consumed and utilized in different parts of Ethiopia for staple food, filling seasonal food shortages, emergency food during a famine, and household income generation. There is a pressing need for domestication and improvement of some wild edible fruits for increased production, diversifying income for small-scale farmers, and conservation of the diminishing wild edible fruit resources. A total of 37 widely utilized and marketed wild edible fruit species falling into 23 families were recognized as of used in different parts of the country. Of which, 26 species are identified as available in local markets in different parts of the country. Ziziphus spina-christi, Syzygium guineense, Balanites aegyptiaca, and other nine species were identified as a priority wild edible fruit species from available information based on utilization extent, preference ranking by farmers, product marketability, and conservation needs for the species. There exists a lack of scientifically planned genetic variation evaluation, superior variety selection, genetic improvement, and seedling production initiatives for indigenous wild edible fruit species in Ethiopia. All of the 37 widely utilized and marketed wild fruit species have not developed to their full potential in terms of quality, production scale, and market in the country. Identifying and selecting priority species, strengthening botanical information, germplasm collection and improvement, production and processing technologies, increasing the supply of improved planting materials, and promoting on-farm cultivation of wild edible fruit-based agroforestry systems were identified as key future strategies for domestication and wider cultivation of wild edible fruit species.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8538188
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alebel Melaku
Mohammed Ahmed Ebrahim
spellingShingle Alebel Melaku
Mohammed Ahmed Ebrahim
Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia
International Journal of Forestry Research
author_facet Alebel Melaku
Mohammed Ahmed Ebrahim
author_sort Alebel Melaku
title Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia
title_short Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia
title_full Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Critical Review on Wild-Edible Fruit Species in Ethiopia
title_sort critical review on wild-edible fruit species in ethiopia
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Forestry Research
issn 1687-9376
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Wild edible fruit species are commonly consumed and utilized in different parts of Ethiopia for staple food, filling seasonal food shortages, emergency food during a famine, and household income generation. There is a pressing need for domestication and improvement of some wild edible fruits for increased production, diversifying income for small-scale farmers, and conservation of the diminishing wild edible fruit resources. A total of 37 widely utilized and marketed wild edible fruit species falling into 23 families were recognized as of used in different parts of the country. Of which, 26 species are identified as available in local markets in different parts of the country. Ziziphus spina-christi, Syzygium guineense, Balanites aegyptiaca, and other nine species were identified as a priority wild edible fruit species from available information based on utilization extent, preference ranking by farmers, product marketability, and conservation needs for the species. There exists a lack of scientifically planned genetic variation evaluation, superior variety selection, genetic improvement, and seedling production initiatives for indigenous wild edible fruit species in Ethiopia. All of the 37 widely utilized and marketed wild fruit species have not developed to their full potential in terms of quality, production scale, and market in the country. Identifying and selecting priority species, strengthening botanical information, germplasm collection and improvement, production and processing technologies, increasing the supply of improved planting materials, and promoting on-farm cultivation of wild edible fruit-based agroforestry systems were identified as key future strategies for domestication and wider cultivation of wild edible fruit species.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8538188
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