Decision tree scoring system to guide selection for consumer preference in sweetpotato breeding trials

Author:

Nakitto Mariam12,Ssali Reuben T1ORCID,Johanningsmeier Suzanne D3,Moyo Mukani4,de Kock Henriette2ORCID,Berget Ingunn5,Okello Julius J1,Mayanja Sarah1,Tinyiro Samuel Edgar6,Mendes Thiago4ORCID,Benard Yada7,Chelengat Doreen7ORCID,Osaru Florence7,Bugaud Christophe89

Affiliation:

1. International Potato Center (CIP‐SSA) Kampala Uganda

2. Department of Consumer and Food Sciences University of Pretoria Pretoria South Africa

3. United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Southeast Area Food Science and Market Quality & Handling Research Unit Raleigh NC USA

4. International Potato Center (CIP‐SSA Regional Office) Nairobi Kenya

5. Norwegian Institute of Food, Fisheries and Aquaculture Research (NOFIMA) Tromsø Norway

6. National Agricultural Research Laboratories, National Agricultural Research Organisation Kampala Uganda

7. National Crops' Resources Research Institute, National Agricultural Research Organisation Kampala Uganda

8. CIRAD, UMR QUALISUD Montpellier France

9. QualiSud, Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, Montpellier SupAgro Univ Avigon, Univ La Réunion Montpellier France

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDPreviously, a lexicon and protocol for quantitative descriptive analysis (QDA) was established for the Uganda sweetpotato breeding program. The implication of QDA scores for priority sensory attributes on consumer preference should be determined to interpret results efficiently and make decisions effectively. The present study aimed to develop a gender‐responsive decision tree to obtain an overall sweetpotato eating quality score to facilitate demand‐led targeted breeding selection. It focused on Kamuli and Hoima districts (Uganda) and uses pre‐lease advanced clones (‘NKB3’, ‘NKB105’, ‘NKB135’, ‘D11’ and ‘D20’), released varieties (‘NASPOT 8’ and ‘NAROSPOT 1’) and landraces (‘Muwulu‐Aduduma’, ‘Umbrella’).RESULTSIncluding boiled sweetpotato sensory characteristics, namely mealy, sweet taste, sweetpotato smell, firm and not fibrous, in breeding design would benefit end‐users, especially women given their role in varietal selection, food preparation and marketing. ‘D20’, ‘NASPOT 8’ and ‘NAROSPOT 1’ were most liked in both districts. ‘NKB3’ and ‘D11’ were the least liked in Hoima, whereas ‘Muwulu‐Aduduma’ was the least liked in Kamuli. There was a positive correlation between color and overall liking (r2 = 0.8) and consumers liked the color (average rating ≥ 6 on a nine‐point hedonic scale) of all genotypes. Threshold values (average rating on 11‐point scales) for consumer acceptability were identified (sweet taste = 6, sweetpotato aroma and flavor = 6, firmness = 3, and mealiness = 4). A regression decision tree tool was created to calculate an eating quality selection index when screening lines in breeding programs using the values.CONCLUSIONDecision trees that include consumer needs and gender considerations would facilitate demand‐led breeding and make varietal selection in sweetpotato breeding programs more effective. © 2023 The Authors. Journal of The Science of Food and Agriculture published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Food Science,Biotechnology

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