Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acronyms
- Chapter 1 Cassava
- Chapter 2 The Potato
- Chapter 3 Sweetpotato
- Chapter 4 Other Andean Roots and Tubers
- Chapter 5 Yams
- Chapter 6 Banana and Plantain
- Chapter 7 Cowpea
- Chapter 8 Chickpea
- Chapter 9 Groundnut
- Chapter 10 Lentil
- Chapter 11 Phaseolus Beans
- Chapter 12 Pigeonpea
- Chapter 13 Faba Bean
- Chapter 14 Soyabean
- Chapter 15 Barley
- Chapter 16 Maize, Tripsacum and Teosinte
- Chapter 17 Pearl Millet
- Chapter 18 Small Millets
- Chapter 19 Rice
- Chapter 20 Sorghum
- Chapter 21 Wheat
- Chapter 22 Forages
- Index
Chapter 15 - Barley
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acronyms
- Chapter 1 Cassava
- Chapter 2 The Potato
- Chapter 3 Sweetpotato
- Chapter 4 Other Andean Roots and Tubers
- Chapter 5 Yams
- Chapter 6 Banana and Plantain
- Chapter 7 Cowpea
- Chapter 8 Chickpea
- Chapter 9 Groundnut
- Chapter 10 Lentil
- Chapter 11 Phaseolus Beans
- Chapter 12 Pigeonpea
- Chapter 13 Faba Bean
- Chapter 14 Soyabean
- Chapter 15 Barley
- Chapter 16 Maize, Tripsacum and Teosinte
- Chapter 17 Pearl Millet
- Chapter 18 Small Millets
- Chapter 19 Rice
- Chapter 20 Sorghum
- Chapter 21 Wheat
- Chapter 22 Forages
- Index
Summary
Barley is a cool-season crop in countries with a Mediterranean climate and is well adapted to stressful and extreme environments. Barley fields can be seen as high as 4800 m asl in the Himalayas, in latitudes over 60°N in Iceland and Scandinavia and in the rain-fed semi-arid regions of WANA with less than 250 mm annual rainfall. Barley is a principal food crop in highlands and marginal areas where other cereals will not grow, as well as animal feed and forage all over the world. It is also an important industrial crop, providing raw material for malt and beer production. Its straw is of better quality than that of wheat and is, therefore, a valuable complement of cattle and small ruminant diets. Barley is grown in a wide range of environments but nearly two-thirds of the world's production is grown in subhumid or semi-arid regions.
BOTANY AND DISTRIBUTION
Barley belongs to the tribe Triticeae of the grass family Poaceae together with other important cereals, wheat and rye. The main distinction from other members of the tribe is that each spike node bears three 1-flowered spikelets (‘triplets’) of which one, two or all three are fertile. The genus Hordeum includes about 30 species (Bothmer 1992a). According to the same author, the 45 taxa of the genus are mostly diploid (2n=2x=14 chromosomes, 28 taxa), but also tetraploid (2n=4x=28 chromosomes, 16 taxa) and hexaploid (2n=6x=42 chromosomes, 8 taxa) with a basic chromosome number x=7.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Biodiversity in TrustConservation and Use of Plant Genetic Resources in CGIAR Centres, pp. 191 - 212Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
- 1
- Cited by