Sweetpotato is an important staple crop in East Africa with great potential for introducing improved cultivars, but little is known about which sensory characteristics are desirable. Over a 2 year period, 600 consumers were interviewed at three locations (urban and rural) in the Lake Zone of Tanzania and their preference of 14 locally available sweetpotato cultivars in cooked form was evaluated. A simple questionnaire based on consumers first-choice preference was used followed by socio-economic questions. A trained sensory panel profiled the cooked sweetpotato samples, enabling comparisons with preference, location and season. Cluster analysis based on the sensory attributes was used to classify the cultivars into three groups; one cluster comprised the most preferred cultivars and another contained the least. Some cultivars were consistently preferred over the 2 year period while others were not. The location where the cultivars were grown also influenced preference. Stepwise regression indicated that the most discriminating sensory attributes were starch and stickiness. Target levels based on the mean intensity scores of these attributes are suggested as a means of screening new cultivars. The implications of these findings are discussed.
The response of the sweetpotato weevil Cylas puncticollis (Coleoptera: Brentidae) to roots of different sweetpotato cvs was investigated as part of a project to examine the factors that affect susceptibility of sweetpotato cvs to weevil infestation in the field. Laboratory experiments were conducted at two sites (Ukiriguru and Kibaha) in Tanzania and at one site (Serere) in Uganda to determine if the harvested storage roots of sweetpotato cvs differed in their acceptability to C. puncticollis or if any root antibiosis towards C. puncticollis existed. For all experiments cultivar effects for the total number of emerging adults were significant to at least 10% and in most cases were much more significant. At Ukiriguru and Kibaha, the results showed reasonable consistency between years, and of the four cultivars used at both sites, fewer C. puncticollis adults emerged from roots of Sinia and Budagala than from SPN/0 and Mwanamonde on all occasions. A relationship between laboratory experiments and crown damage by Cylas spp. in the field suggests that cultivar differences in attraction/deterrence for Cylas spp. exist. However, correlations between adult emergence in laboratory antibiosis experiments and field infestation levels were generally not strong. Although this indicates that cultivar selection by laboratory experiments is not a useful strategy for reducing field infestation, there may be potential for using such techniques to select cultivars that are resistant to attack during longterm storage.
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