Handbook of Herbs and Spices - Volume 3

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300 Handbook of herbs and spices


as Vitamin A, C and E. In fact, vitamin C was first purified from Capsicum fruits in


1928 by Hungarian biochemist Albert Szent Gyorgyi, which helped him to receive


the Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine during 1937.


In this chapter, attempts have been made to describe in brief the taxonomic status


of pepper and elaborate innovative uses of carotenoids and capsaicinoids present in


the pepper fruits and their biosynthetic pathways. General cultural practices of growing


pepper under open field conditions have also been briefly described.


16.2 The genus Capsicum......................................................................


The genus Capsicum perhaps comes from the Latin word ‘capsa’, meaning chest or


box because of the shape of fruits, which enclose seeds very neatly, as in a box


(Berke and Shieh, 2000). The Capsicum (2n = 24) encompasses a diverse group of


plants producing pungent or non-pungent fruits. At present, it is widely accepted that


the genus consists of approximately 25 wild and five cultivated species. Based on the


gene flow through natural and conventional hybridization, the Capsicum species are


grouped in three species complexes (Table 16.1). Among the cultivated species, viz.,


C. annuum, C. frutescens, C. chinense, C. baccatum (var. baccatum), C. pubescens,


cultivation of C. annuum is the most widely spread all over the world. C. annuum


was domesticated in the highlands of Mexico and includes most of the Mexican chile


(syn. chilli), most of the chilli of Asia and Africa and sweet peppers of temperate


countries. However, due to the non-adaptability of C. annuum in lowland tropics of


Latin America, its cultivation was replaced by C. frutescens and C. chinense (Pickersgill,


1997). The cultivation of C. baccatum and C. pubescens is mostly restricted to Latin


American countries like Peru, Bolivia, Columbia and Brazil. In India also, although


C. annuum is most widely cultivated, C. frutescens, C. chinense and C. baccatum are


also grown in specific regions. Except for C. pubescens, wild forms of the remaining


four cultivated species are known.


All the five cultivated species of Capsicum are represented by genotypes with


pungent (hot pepper) or non-pungent (sweet pepper) fruits. Furthermore, these


species have huge variability for fruit size/shape and pungency and often genotypes


with similar fruit morphology exist across the species. Hence assigning a given


genotype to a specific cultivated species based on fruit size, shape and pungency is


difficult. Nonetheless, certain flower and fruit descriptors may be used to assign a


genotype to a cultivated species without much doubt (Table 16.2). Recently, molecular


markers associated with specific species within C. annuum the complex have been


developed.


Table 16.1 Three recognized species complexes of the genus Capsicum


Complex Species


C. annuum complex C. annuum L., C. frutescens L., C. chinense Jacq., C. chacoense
Hunz., C. galapagoense Hunz.
C. baccatum complex C. baccatum
L., C. praetermissum Heiser & Smith, C. tovarii
C. pubescens complex C. pubescens* Ruiz & Pav., C. cardenasii Heiser & Smith, C. eximium
Hunz.



  • Cultivated species.

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