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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Habitats, morphological diversity, and distribution of the genus Vigna Savi in Australia

R. J. Lawn and A. R. Watkinson

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 53(12) 1305 - 1316
Published: 16 December 2002

Abstract

Vigna is an agriculturally important genus containing several important species used as pulses, forages, vegetable, or cover crops. The genus is represented in Australia by 5 species, 4 indigenous (V. radiata, V. vexillata, V. luteola, V. marina) and 1 endemic (V. lanceolata). A germplasm collection has been assembled comprising >400 accessions of the 5 Vigna species from Australia and offshore and seed committed to storage as the CSIRO National Vigna collection. For a large number of accessions, herbarium sheets have also been prepared either from field or glasshouse-grown plants and lodged with the Qld Herbarium, Brisbane. This paper describes the structure of the collection and, for each of the 5 species and major regional variants, summarises provenance information on their geographic distribution, habitat, soil type, and associated species. Within the Australian tropics/subtropics, the Vigna species collectively occupy a diverse range of grassland habitats extending from the foreshore to the central desert. Of the 5 species, the endemic V. lanceolata is the most diverse in terms of distribution, habitat, and morphology. Geographic gaps in the collection are noted and priorities for future collection suggested.

Keywords: germplasm, native legumes.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR02065

© CSIRO 2002

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