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Cotton: An Introduction
Chapter · January 1970
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-04796-1_1
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            University of Agricultural Sciences, Dharwad                                                          Central Institute for Cotton Research
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Chapter 1
Cotton: An Introduction
B.M. Khadi, V. Santhy, and M.S. Yadav
1.1    Introduction
Cotton is currently the leading plant fibre crop worldwide and is grown commer-
cially in the temperate and tropical regions of more than 50 countries (Smith
1999), with a total coverage of 34 million ha. The cotton seed coat extends into
tubular fibre and is spun into yarn. Specific areas of production include countries
such as USA, India, China, the Middle East and Australia, where climatic con-
ditions suit the natural growth requirements of cotton, including periods of
hot and dry weather, and where adequate moisture is available, often obtained
through irrigation. Among the five major cotton growing countries, China holds
the highest productivity level (1,265 kg/ha), followed by USA (985 kg/ha),
Uzbekistan (831 kg/ha), Pakistan (599 kg/ha) and India (560 kg/ha) (Table 1.1).
India ranks first in terms of cultivated area, occupying over a quarter of the world
cotton area, followed by China, USA, and Pakistan. About 26.247 million metric
tons of cotton are produced globally, and the major countries contributing
the most are China, India, USA and Pakistan followed by Uzbekistan, Turkey,
Australia, Greece, Brazil and Egypt.
   The cotton species recognized in the world are about 50, of which 4 are
cultivated. Two of these (Gossypium arboreum and G. herbaceum) are diploids,
and two (G. hirsutum and G. barbadense) are tetraploids. More than 80% of the
world’s cotton area is covered by tetraploids. However, diploid cottons are
cultivated in Asia and the Middle East. India is the only country where all the
cultivated species and some of their hybrid combinations are commercially grown.
B.M. Khadi
Dean (Post Graduate Studies), University of Agricultural Sciences, Dharwad-580005, Karnataka,
India
e-mail: bmkhadi@rediffmail.com
V. Santhy and M.S. Yadav
Central Institute for Cotton Research, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India
U.B. Zehr (ed.), Cotton, Biotechnology in Agriculture and Forestry 65,                     1
DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-04796-1_1, # Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2010
2                                                                        B.M. Khadi et al.
Table 1.1 Major cotton growing countries of the world (2007–2008)
Sl. No.     Country             Area (000 ha)    Production            Productivity (kg/ha)
                                                 (000 metric tonnes)
1           China (M)           6,385            8,078                 1,265
2           USA                 4,245            4,182                 985
3           India               9,555            5,355                 560
4           Pakistan            3,082            1,845                 599
5           Uzbekistan          1,450            1,206                 831
6           Turkey              520              675                   1,298
7           Australia           63               126                   2,000
8           Brazil              1,077            1,603                 1,487
9           Egypt               246              224                   909
10          Greece              300              285                   950
11          Argentina           311              152                   489
12          Others              6,129            2,516
            World average       33,363           26,247                787
Source: Cotton: World Statistics, November 2008
The diversity of cotton cultivars and cotton agro climatic zones in India is larger
when compared to other major cotton growing countries in the world.
1.2    History and Taxonomy
The first reference to cotton is found in a Rig-Veda hymn, which was written about
the fifteenth century BC. The use of cotton in about 800 BC is recorded in Manu’s
“Dharmashastra”. The Sanskrit word karpasa,I, which is connected to kapas of
modern Hindustani, was used in ancient literature. The technological and agricul-
tural term in English, Cotton, which describes cultivated species of Gossypium,
comes from the Arabic word qutum or kutum (Brown and Ware 1958). Systematic
taxonomic study of cotton started with the description of Gossypium by Linnaeus in
1953.
   The work of Sir George Watt entitled “The wild and cultivated cotton plants of
the world” provided a new dimension to the taxonomic studies. The cytological
studies of Zaitzev (1928) cited in the paper “A contribution to the classification of
genus Gossypium” was a landmark in cotton classification. Kohel (1973) has
addressed the description of genetic mutants based on the rules of the International
Committee on Genetic Symbols and Nomenclature.
   Among the 50 species recognized in the dicotyledonous genus Gossypium,
belonging to family Malvaceae about 45 are diploids divided into three geographi-
cal groups and corresponding subgenera viz. Sturtia, Houzingenia and Gossypium,
five species are tetraploids included in one subgenus viz. Karpas (Fryxell 1984;
Wendel and Cronn 2003; Cronn and Wendel 2004) (Table 1.2).
   The diploid species with 26 chromosomes are placed in eight cytogenetic
genome groups designated A–G and K and tetraploids with 52 chromosomes in
Table 1.2 Classification of Genus Gossypium
Primary distribution         No. of species       Subgenus      Section        Subsections        Examples of species
                                                                                                                                     1 Cotton: An Introduction
Africa (Africa and Arabian 14                     Gossypium     Gossypium      Gossypium          Asiatic diploids
   peninsula)                                                   Pseudopambak   Anamola            G. anomalum
                                                                               Pseudopambak       G. stocksii
                                                                               Longibola          G. longicalyx
Australia (NW Kimberly     17 (16 taxonomically   Sturtia       Sturtia                           G. sturtianum
   region)                    described)                        Grandi calys                      G. costulatum
                                                                Hibiscoidea                       G. australe
America (West Mexico       14 (13 taxonomically   Houzingenia   Houzingenia    Houzingenia        G. thurberi
  Galapagos islands and       described)                                       Integrifolia       G. davidsonii
  Peru)                                                                        Caducibractealaa   G. harknessii
                                                                Erioxylum      Erioxylum          G. aridum
                                                                               Selera             G. gossypioides
                                                                               Astromericana      G. raimondii
American Pacific           5                      Karpas        –              –                  All tetraploid species
                                                                                                      including New World cultivar
                                                                                                                                     3
4                                                                            B.M. Khadi et al.
one group designated AD (Endrizzi et al. 1985; Fryxell 1992; Stewart 1995;
Wendel and Cronn 2003) according to the genome affinities. The five allotetraploid
species are the united version of Old World A and New World D genome in A
genome cytoplasm (Skovsted 1937; Brubaker et al. 1999a) (Table 1.3).
Table 1.3 Gossypium species grouped according to germplasm pool
Pool       Species              Genome Seed Notes
Primary    G. hirsutum          AD1      +      Current and obsolete cultivars, breeding
                                                   stocks, land races, referral and wild
                                                   accessions
           G. barbadense        AD2      +      Current and obsolete cultivars, breeding
                                                   stocks, land races, referral and wild
                                                   accessions
           G. tomentosum        AD3      +      Hawaiian Islands
           G. mustelinum        AD4      +      NE Brazil
           G. darwinii          AD5      +      Galapagos Islands
Secondary G. herbaceum          A1              Cultivars, landraces of Africa and Asia minor,
                                                   one wild from Southern Africa
           G. arboreum          A2       +      Cultivars, landraces from Asia minor, SE
                                                   Asia and China; some African
           G. anomalum          B1       +      Two subspecies, Sahel and SW Africa
           G. triphyllum        B2       +      SW Africa
           G. capitis-viridis   B3       +      Cape Verde Islands
           G. trifurcatum       B?             NE Somalia
           G. longicalyx        F1       +      Trailing shrub, Sudan, Uganda, Tanzania
           G. thurberi          D1       +      Sonora Desert, North America
           G. armourianum       D2-1     +      Baja California ( San Marcos Island)
           G. harkenssii        D2-2     +      Central Baja California
           G. davidsonii        D3-d     +      Southern Baja California
           G. klotzchianum      D3-k     +      Galapagos Islands
           G. aridum            D4       +      Arborescent, Pacific slopes of Mexico
           G. raimondii         D5       +      Pacific slopes valleys of Peru
           G. gossypioides      D6       +      Central Oaxaca, Mexico
           G. lobatum           D7       +      Arborescent, Central Michoacan, Mexico,
                                                   West Central Mexico
           G. tumerui           D10      +      NW Mexico, coastal
           G. schwendimanii     D11      +      Arborescent, El Infiernillo Valley, SW
                                                   Mexico
Tertiary   G. sturtianum        C1       +      Ornamental, Trans central Australia arid zone
           G. robinsonii        C2       +      Western Australia
           G. bickii            G1       +      Central Australia arid zone
           G. australe          G        +      Trans Australia, North arid zone
           G. nelsonii          G        +      Central Australia
           G. costulatum        K        +      North Kimberley (wet–dry tropical Western
                                                   Australia)
           G. cunninghamii      K        +      Northern NT, Australia
           G. enthyle           K        +      North Kimberley, WA
           G. exgiuum           K        +      Prostrate, North Kimberley, WA
           G. nobile            K        +      North Kimberley WA
           G. pilosum           K        +      Terailing, Nort Kimberley, WA
           G. populifolium      K        +      North Kimberley, WA
                                                                                   (continued)
  1 Cotton: An Introduction                                                              5
  Table 1.3 (continued)
  Pool       Species              Genome   Seed   Notes
             G. pulchellum        K        +      North Kimberley, WA
             G. rotundifolium     K        +      Prostrate, North Kimberley, WA
             G. sp. nov.          K        +      North Kimberley, WA
             G. stocksii          E1       +      Arabian Peninsula and Horn of Africa
             G. somalense         E2       +      Horn of Africa to Chad
             G. areysianum        E3       +      Yemen
             G. incanum           E4       +      Yemen
             G. benadirense       E              Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya
             G. bricchettii       E              Somalia
             G. vollesenii        E              Somalia
  1.3            Origin and Distribution
  DNA-sequence phylogenetic data suggest that 6–7 million years ago, following a
  trans-oceanic dispersal event, a D genome diverged from the African lineage that
  eventually gave rise to the A genome, and became a separate lineage in the
  Americas (primarily Mexico) (Senchina et al. 2003; Wendel and Cronn 2003;
  Cronn and Wendel 2004). From another long-distance dispersal event 1–2 million
  years ago, a tetraploid originated through hybridization of an African plant of
  the A-genome group, perhaps most closely related to the present-day species
  G. herbaceum, with a resident plant of the D-genome group, most closely related
  to the present-day species G. raimondii (Wendel et al. 1992; Senchina et al. 2003;
  Wendel and Cronn 2003; Kebede et al. 2007). The nascent disomic AD allotetra-
  ploid from that single polyploidisation event evolved into the five present-day
  tetraploid species (Endrizzi 1962). Comparative RFLP mapping was used to con-
  struct genetic maps for the allotetraploids (AD genome n ¼ 26) and diploids (A &
  D genome n ¼ 13) (Brubaker et al. 1999b). The study showed that allotetraploid A
  and D genomes and A & D diploid genomes are recombinationally equivalent
  despite nearly two fold difference in physical size. Polypoidisation in Gossypium is
  associated with enhanced recombination as genetic lengths for allotetraploid gen-
  omes are over 50% greater than those of their diploid counterparts. The concept of
  organismal and genome relationships of diploid and allopolyploid taxa in the genus
  Gossypium have been given in Fig. 1.1.
      Gossypium raimondii, a rare species of northwestern Peru, is considered to be
  the diploid with the genome that has retained the most similarity to this ancestral
  D-genome species (Guo et al. 2007). It is one of the more recently evolved of the
  DD species, having diverged in isolation as a result of a long-distance dispersal
  event from Mexico (Wendel and Cronn 2003; Alvarez et al. 2005).
      Soon after separation of the D-genome lineage, African Gossypium further
  diverged with a long distance dispersal event resulting in establishment of an
  Australian lineage (which evolved into the three genome groups C, G and K). The
  lineage in Africa evolved further into four genome groups, first with divergence of
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