Our Mission
To conserve the germplasm of tropical tuber crops both ex situ and under in vitro conditions.
To develop improved varieties for high yield, high starch, high dry matter, bio-fortified with vitamins, minerals and antioxidants, enhanced resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses, climate resilience, nutrient use efficiency, eco-regional suitability and adaptability to different cropping systems to cater to the industries as well as the food and fodder sector.
To intervene in the improvement of tuber crops through novel breeding approaches combining omics, both genomics and phenomics as well as other molecular biology tools.
Our Team
Name | Designation |
---|---|
Dr. Manas R Sahoo | Principal Scientist & Head |
Dr. P. Murugesan | Principal Scientist |
Dr. Asha K.I. | Principal Scientist |
Dr. C. Mohan | Principal Scientist |
Dr. Asha Devi | Principal Scientist |
Dr. Shirly Raichal Anil | Principal Scientist |
Dr. L. K. Bharathi | Principal Scientist |
Dr. N. Krishna Radhika | Senior Scientist |
Dr. Visalakshi Chandra C | Scientist |
Dr. Senthil Kumar K M | Scientist |
Dr. Sujatha T. P. | Scientist |
Dr. Rahana S. N | Scientist |
G. Suresh | Technical Officer |
B. S. Prakash Krishnan | Technical Officer |
P. S. Shameer | Technical Assistant |
K. Chandran | Technician |
S. L. Jyothi | Skilled Support Staff |
Our Achievements
ICAR-CTCRI is the National Active Germplasm Site (NAGS) for tropical tuber crops conserving 5542 accessions comprising important tuber crops like cassava, sweet potato, yams, edible aroids and minor tuber crops. These include around 50 species.
The Field Gene bank (FGB) includes landraces collected from different states of India as well as exotic accessions from Africa, Latin America, China, the Pacific Islands, etc.
Pre-breeding lines (inbreds, inter-specific backcross) of tuber crops and crop wild relatives (CWR) are conserved in the FGB/ net houses.
The Division of Crop Improvement has released 71 high-yielding improved varieties of tropical tuber crops, comprising 20 cassava, 21 sweet potato, 16 yams (9 D. alata, 5 D. rotundata, and 2 D. esculenta), 10 taro, 2 elephant foot yam and 1 Chinese potato. The varieties were developed to cater to the following categories –industrial, food and fodder.
Crop wise database of varieties released by ICAR CTCRI
The developed varieties cater to the following categories: industrial, food, and fodder. They were developed with high yield, high starch, and high dry matter, bio-fortified with vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants, enhanced resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses, climate resilience, nutrient use efficiency, eco-regional suitability, and adaptability to different cropping systems. These include:
- World’s first greater yam hybrid- Sree Shilpa
- World’s first dwarf white yam- Sree Dhanya
The other major highlights are:
- India’s first cassava mosaic disease-resistant variety- Sree Padmanabha
- First hybrid elephant foot yam developed for Kerala- Sree Athira
- First hybrid taro developed for Kerala- Sree Kiran
Cassava Mosaic Disease (CMD) is a major setback for the otherwise prospective cassava industry. To address this issue, many cassavamosaic-resistant varieties were also developed by the Division, which has been a boon to the farming community as well as the Industries.
Climate resilience is an important trait to target under unpredictable and changing climatic conditions. The Division has successfully developed many climate-resilient varieties of cassava (5), sweet potato (10), greater yam (2), white yam (3), and taro (5).
Biofortification is of utmost interest as it naturally fortifies important vitamins, minerals, etc. Biofortified crops fetch a better price in the market and ensure the nutritional security of the nation. The Division developed many naturally biofortified tuber crop varieties, including cassava (3), sweet potato (6), and greater yam (1).
Naturally biofortified cassava and greater yam varieties
Apart from these varieties, few other lines are in the pipeline, which will be proposed to be released soon.
- First varieties in arrowroot, one for the State of Kerala and two for Central release
- First varieties in tannia, one for the State of Kerala and another for Central release
- A non-trailing high yielding white yam variety for the state of Kerala.
- A variety of yam bean, the first from ICAR-CTCRI.
- Two bio-fortified sweet potato varieties
Various biotechnological tools were adopted for the conservation and improvement of tuber crops, viz.,
- In vitro Active Germplasm (IVAG) for conservation
- Standardization of in vitro protocols.
- Standardization of cryopreservation protocols.
- DNA fingerprinting of released varieties using different markers
- Standardization of bioprospecting in different germplasm of tuber crops
- Oomics approaches for the development of improved varieties.
- Transgenic approaches for quality improvement in cassava.
- Genetic modification through gene editing
- Transcriptome sequencing
- Bioinformatics for gene mining
The major achievements through biotechnological means
- In vitro conservation was used to maintain and conserve the important accessions and varieties in the in vitro active germplasm (IVAG) at the HQ and the Regional Station.
- In vitro protocols were standardized for all the major tuber crops, such as cassava, sweet potato, yams, aroids, and minor tuber crops, for conservation under IVAG.
- Protocols were also standardized for cryopreservation in cassava, yams, and taro using pollen. The viability of cryopreserved pollen from cassava and yams was validated. The cryopreserved pollen was successfully used for hybridization in cassava and taro.
- Bioprospecting studies were performed on different germplasm of tuber crops to identify novel traits with industrial/pharmacological values.
- DNA fingerprinting of tuber crop varieties using SSR markers was done.
- Standardised synthetic seed production for cassava.
- Standardized transformation and regeneration protocols Indian cassava varieties.
- Genetic modification through gene editing approaches are also been attempted especially for the development of waxy cassava.
- Transcriptome sequencing of cassava for drought and PPD as well as TLB in taro was done.
- Whole genome re-sequencing of cassava elite breeding lines 8S-501 and 9S-127 was successfully completed.
Analysis of 8S-501 and 9S-127 draft genome sequences revealed the presence of 7,789,154 and 7,130,986 SNPs in 8S-501 and 9S-127 respectively. Comparative analysis showed the presence of 1,104,776 and 943,104 InDels in 9S-127 and 8S-501 respectively
The SNPs and InDels identified in this study will be utilized for the identification and development of molecular markers linked to important agronomic traits including high starch, profuse flowering and CMD resistance. The high-quality draft assembly would be helpful for mining SSRs and the development of molecular markers for marker-assisted backcross breeding in cassava.
Facilities and Infrastructure
Laboratories
Tissue Culture Lab
Cytogenetics Lab
Molecular Cloning Lab
Molecular Biology Lab
Biotechnology Lab
Genome Editing Lab
Genomics Lab
Major equipments
In vitro facility
- Laminar air flow
- Autoclave
- Dishwasher
- Microscope
- Refrigerator
- Incubator
- Automated temperature and light controlled racks for invitro storage
Molecular biology lab
- Genetic analyser
- Gel Documentation system
- Electrophoresis units and power pack
- NanodropSpectrophotometer
- Refrigerated Incubator shaker
- Hot air oven
- Deep Freezer, -20 degree Celsius
- Ultra freezer -80degree Celsius
- Water purification unit
- Thermal Cycler
- Ice flaking machine
- Autoclave
- Microwave
- Microscope
- Stereomicroscopes
- Waterbath
- Minifuges
Hot plate with stirrer
Publications
SN | Topic | Language | Authors |
1. | Tuber Crops Varieties released by ICAR –Central Tuber Crops Research Institute (Technical Bullettin No. 77) | English | Archana Mukherjee, Sheela M.N., Asha K.I., Asha Devi A., Shirly Raichal Anil, Krishna Radhika N. and Senthilkumar K.M |
2. | Biofortified Tuber Varieties (Folder) | English | Shirly Raichal Anil, Sheela, M.N., Asha K.I., Asha Devi A., Krishna Radhika N., Visalakshi Chandra C., Senthilkumar K.M. |
3. | New CMD Resistant cassava varieties -AICRP (Tuber Crops) | English | Sheela M.N., Makeshkumar T., Sureshkumar J., Sunitha S., Asha K.I., Asha Devi A., Shirly Raichal Anil, Krishna Radhika N. and Abhilash P.V. |
4. | Biofortified sweet potato varieties for India Catalog 2018 | English | Archana Mukherjee, Shirly Raichal Anil, Krishna Radhika N., Sheela M.N., Asha Devi A., Sunitha S. |
5. | Catalogue on Cassava Genetic Resources Revised (Part-1)”. Technical Bulletin No.82. | English | Asha KI, Koundinya AVV, Sheela MN, Asha Devi A and Krishna Radhika N. |
6. | Technical folder on PPV&FR Act | Malayalam | Sheela MN, Asha KI, Asha Devi A, Shirly Raichal Anil, Krishna Radhika N, Vivek Hegde, Prakash Krishnan. |
7. | The protection of plant varieties and farmers rights act 2001 and registration of farmers varieties (English and Tamil). Technical Folder, ICAR-Central Tuber Crops Research Institute, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. | English | Murugesan, P, Jaganathan, D., Velmurugan, K. and Sathya, S. 2023. |
8. | The protection of plant varieties and farmers rights act 2001 and registration of farmers varieties (Technical Folder, ICAR-Central Tuber Crops Research Institute, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. | Tamil | Murugesan, P, Jaganathan, D., Velmurugan, K. and Sathya, S. 2023. |
9. | Genetic Resources, agro-techniques, value addition and utilisation in tropical tuber crops: Current prospects for North Eastern States in India. Technical Bulletin No. 80.ICAR-Central Tuber Crops Research Institute, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. 63p. | English | Murugesan, P., Laxminarayana, K., Visalakshi Chandra, C., Namrata A. Giri, Suresh Kumar J., Sanket J. More and Sethuraman Sivakumar, P. 2020. |
10. | Vilavedupinu sheshamulla maracheeniyude physiological apachayam | Malayalam | Visalakshi Chandra C., Krishna Radhika N. and Sangeetha B.G., Senthil alias Sankar |
11. | Cassava main katayi k baad ki physiological giravat | Hindi | Visalakshi Chandra C., Asha Devi A. and Senthil alias Sankar |
12. | Post-harvest Physiological deterioration in cassava | English | Visalakshi Chandra C., Saravanan Raju, Pradeepika Chintha, Senthil alias Sankar M |
13. | Mravalli kizhangin aruvadai pinsaar udaliyal seerazhivu | Tamil | Visalakshi Chandra C., Saravanan Raju, Senthil alias Sankar M.2023. |
14. | Minor Tuber Crops. Technical Bullettin No 99, | English | Asha, K.I., Sreekumar, J., Ramesh, V., Muthuraj, R., Harish, E.R., Krishnakumar, T., and Aruntselan, R. |
15. | The Rainbow Diet Through Tuber Crops. | English | Sanket J. More, P. Murugesan, K. Laxminarayana, Namrata Giri, Visalakshi Chandra, Suresh Kumar J, Sasankan V .R. |
16. | New cassava mosaic disease resistant cassava varieties –AICRP | Tamil | M.N.Sheela, Visalakshi Chandra C, Senthilkumar KM, Jaganathan D. |
17. | High yielding triploid cassava varieties suitable for starch Industries | Tamil | M.N.Sheela, Visalakshi Chandra C, Senthilkumar KM, Jaganathan D. |
Policy Brief | |||
18. | Strategies and Policies for Biotechnology Research in Tropical Root and Tuber Crops , ICAR-CTCRI, 8 p | English | Sujatha, T.P., Senthilkumar, K.M., Krishna Radhika, N. and Sangeetha, B.G |
Genetic resources and genetic improvement | |||
19. | Genetic Improvement of Tropical Tuber Crops through Conventional and Biotechnological Approach” India- Africa Forum Summit Iii Short Term Training Programme 2018. | English | M. N. Sheela, Shirly Raichal Anil, Krishna Radhika N. Senthilkumar K. M. and Visalakshi Chandra. |
20. | Sustainable Exploitation of genetic resources of under utilized tuber crops (ICAR Short Course 02-11 February,2022). | English | Murugesan, P, Visalakshi Chandra C, A.V.V. Koundinya and Vikramaditya, Pandey |
Others | |||
21. | Tuber Crops based Traditional Food Recipes of Tripura | English | Namrata Ankush Giri, Sanket J. More, P. Murugesan, K. Laxminarayana, Visalakshi chandra C., Suresh Kumar J., P . Sethuraman Sivakumar, Mandira Chakrabarty. |
22. | Vacuum fried chips from bio-fortified sweet potatoes. | English | Pradeepika C., T.Krishnakumar, M.S.Sajeev., S.Shanavas., Visalakshi Chandra C., Sangeetha B.G. |
Our Projects
Mega Project 1 : Mega Project 1: Conservation and utilization of germplasm of tuber crops for sustaining production Institute Code : HORTCTCRISIL 202000901465 Project Leader : Dr. Asha K.I. | ||
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Mega Project 2: Genetic improvement of tuber crops through conventional breeding and molecular approaches Institute Code : HORTCTCRISIL 202001001466 Project Leader : Dr. C. Mohan | ||
Sl.No | Project Title | PI |
1 | Project 1: Breeding to evolve trait specific varieties in cassava, yams and arrowroot for productivity, earliness, quality and resistance to biotic stresses | Dr. M. N. Sheela |
2 | Project 2: Map based cloning of CMD resistant gene(s) & identification of markers associated with drought tolerance and high starch content in cassava | Dr. C. Mohan |
3 | Project 3: Genetic analysis and QTL mapping for determining genetic basis of post-harvest physiological deterioration (PPD) tolerance and enhanced shelf life in cassava | Dr. Visalakshi Chandra C. |
4 | Project 4: Genome analysis, identification and functional characterization of early bulking genes in cassava, abiotic stress and tuberization responsive genes in sweet potato | Dr. Senthilkumar K.M. |
5 | Flagship Project 5: Genetic improvement of cassava through gene editing for modified starch | Dr.Krishna Radhika N |
6 | Project 6: Molecular characterization of nutrient homeostasis in tubers for biofortification of cassava | Dr. Sujatha T. P. |
7 | Project 7: Phenomics approaches for physiological trait based breeding for drought and PPD tolerance in cassava | Dr.C. Mohan |
9 | Project 8: Breeding and evaluation for development of high yielding nutritionally enriched, photo-insensitive, processable and multipurpose sweet potato varieties | Dr. Shirly Raichal Anil |
9 | Project 9: Harnessing the genetic potential of wild Ipomoea spp. through wide hybridization for improvement of sweet potato | Dr. L.K. Bharathi |
10 | Project 10: Breeding for development of high starch, anthocyanin and β-carotene rich varieties in sweet potato and high yielding nutritional rich varieties in yam bean | Dr. Kalidas Pati |
11 | Project 11: Genetic improvement for drought tolerance in sweet potato and high yielding, disease tolerant nutritionally rich lines in taro | Dr. V.B.S. Chauhan |
12 | Project 12: Breeding for earliness, quality traits and salinity tolerance in sweet potato | Dr. Hanume Gowda K. |
13 | Project 13: Genetic improvement of edible aroids for resistance to biotic stress and quality parameters | Dr. Asha Devi A. |
14 | Project 14: Developing breeder seed standards and precocity of genetic vigour for tropical tuber crops | Dr. P. Murugesan |
15 | Project 15: Inducing genetic variability, characterization, grouping and developing breeding lines with large tuber size and short duration in Chinese potato | Dr. P. Murugesan |
Externally Aided Projects | |||
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Sl.No | Project Title | Principal Investigator | Co-PIs |
1 | Establishment of varietal gene bank and development of standards of DUS testing for varietal gene bank in sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) and cassava (Manihot esculenta) | Dr. M. N. Sheela | Asha K.I., Asha Devi A., Shirly Raichal Anil, Krishna Radhika N. |
2 | Establishment of varietal gene bank and development of standards of DUS testing for varietal gene bank in yam bean (Pachyrhizus erosus) and greater yam (Dioscorea alata) | Dr. M. N. Sheela | J. Sreekumar |
3 | ICAR-Bioversity International & CIAT Alliance collaborative work plan activity on Germplasm exchange, improvement and testing advanced clean seed technology in cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) | M.N. Sheela S. Sunitha T. Makeshkumar | G. Byju, Asha K.I. Senthilkumar K.M. P. Murugesan R. Muthuraj |
4 | Establishment of varietal gene bank and development of standards of DUS testing for varietal gene bank in taro and elephant foot yam | Dr. Kalidas Pati | -- |
5 | Establishment of varietal gene bank and development of standards of DUS testing for varietal gene bank in sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) and cassava (Manihot esculenta) | Kalidas Pati(Collaborating Centre) | --- |
6 | Establishment of varietal gene bank and development of standards of DUS testing for varietal gene bank in yam bean (Pachyrhizus erosus) and greater yam(Dioscorea alata) | Kalidas Pati(Collaborating Centre) | --- |
7 | ICAR-CIP collaborative work plan activity on Crop improvement and varietal selection of sweet potato | Shirly Raichal Anil | Visalakshi Chandra C. , A.N. Jyothi, V.S. Santhosh Mithra , P. Sethuraman Sivakumar, Saravanan Raju |
8 | Micro tuber production and gene prospecting for photoresponsive tuberization in Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam | Shirly Raichal Anil | Krishna Radhika N,Senthilkumar K.M. |
9 | In vitro quality planting material production of tuber crops to meet the demand of Odisha | V.B.S. Chauhan | Kalidas Pati, Hanume Gowda K., M. Nedunchezhiyan |
10 | Collection and database creation of important named landraces of tuber crops from southern districts of Kerala | Asha K.I. | M.N. SheelaAsha Devi A., Shirly Raichal Anil ,Krishna Radhika N. |