Listing description
The cowpea (Vigna
unguiculata) is one of several species
of the widely cultivated genus Vigna.
Four subspecies are recognised, of which three are cultivated (more exist,
including V. textilis, V. pubescens, and V. sinensis):
Detailed description
Cowpeas
are one of the most important food legume
crops in the semiarid tropics covering Asia, Africa, southern Europe, and
Central and South America. A drought-tolerant and warm-weather crop, cowpeas
are well-adapted to the drier regions of the tropics, where other food legumes
do not perform well. It also has the useful ability to fix
atmospheric nitrogen through its root
nodules, and it grows well in poor soils with more than 85% sand and with
less than 0.2% organic matter and low levels of phosphorus. In addition, it is
shade tolerant, so is compatible as an intercrop
with maize,
millet,
sorghum,
sugarcane,
and cotton.
This makes cowpeas an important component of traditional intercropping systems,
especially in the complex and elegant subsistence farming systems of the dry savannas
in sub-Saharan Africa. In these systems the haulm (dried stalks) of cowpea is a
valuable by-product, used as animal feed.Research in Ghana found that selecting early generations of cowpea crops to increase yield is not an effective strategy. Francis Padi from the Savannah Agricultural Research Institute in Tamale, Ghana, writing in Crop Science, suggests other methods such as bulk breeding are more efficient in developing high-yield varieties.
According to the USDA food database, the leaves of the cowpea plant have the highest percentage of calories from protein among vegetarian foods.
Taxonomy and etymology
Vigna unguiculata is a member of the Vigna
(peas or beans) genus. Unguiculata is Latin for "with a small claw",
which reflects the small stalks on the flower petals. All cultivated cowpeas
are found within the universally accepted V. unguiculata subspecies unguiculata
classification, which is then commonly divided into four cultivar
groups: Unguiculata, Biflora, Sesquipedalis, and Textilis.
Some well-known common names for cultivated cowpeas include Lesera/ Dangbodi (লেছেৰা/ ডাংবডি) in Assamese,
black-eye pea, southern pea, yardlong
bean, catjang and Crowder Pea. The classification of the wild relatives within V.
unguiculata is more complicated, with over 20 different names having been
used and between 3 and 10 subgroups described. The original subgroups of stenophylla,
dekindtiana and tenuis appear to be common in all taxonomic
treatments, with the earlier described variations pubescens and protractor
being raised to sub species level by a 1993 charactisation.
Common names of Vigna unguiculata unguiculata
cultivar groups
|
|
Group
|
Common name
|
Unguiculata
|
crowder-pea, southern pea,
black-eyed pea
|
Biflora
|
catjang, sow-pea
|
Sesquipedalis
|
yardlong bean, asparagus bean,
Chinese long-bean
|
Textilis
|
Description
There
is a large morphological diversity found within the crop,
and the growth conditions and grower preferences for each variety vary from
region to region.
History
Although
there is no archaeological evidence for early cowpea cultivation the centre of diversity of the cultivated cowpea is West
Africa, leading to the current consensus that this is the likely centre
of origin and place of early domestication.
In 2300 BC the cowpea is believed to have made its way into South East Asia
where secondary domestication events may have occurred. The first written
references to the cowpea were in 300BC and they probably reached Central and
North America during the slave
trade through the 17th to early 19th centuries.
Cultivation
Cowpeas
are grown mostly for their edible beans, although the leaves, green peas and
green pea pods can also be consumed, meaning the cowpea can be used as a food
source before the dried peas are harvested. Cowpeas thrive in poor dry
conditions, growing well in soils up to 85% sand. This makes them a
particularly important crop in arid, semi-desert regions where not many other
crops will grow. As well as an important source of food for humans in poor arid
regions the crop can also be used as feed for livestock. This predominately
occurs in India, where the stock is fed cowpea as forage or fodder. The
nitrogen fixing ability means that as well as functioning as a sole-crop, the
cowpea can be effectively intercropped with sorghum, millet, maize, cassava or
cotton.
Pests and diseases
Insects
are a major factor in the low yields of African cowpea crops, and they affect
each tissue component and developmental stage of the plant. In bad infestations
insect pressure is responsible for over 90% loss in yield. The legume pod borer
Maruca (testulalis) vitrata, is the main pre-harvest pest of the cowpea.
It causes damage to the flower buds, flowers and pods of the plant. Other
important pests include pod sucking bugs, thrips and the post-harvest weevil Callosobruchus
maculatus.
Culinary use
In
Tamil
Nadu, India, between the Tamil months of Maasi
(February) and Panguni (March), a cake-like dish called kozhukattai
(steamed sweet dumplings – also called Sukhiyan in Kerala) is prepared
with cooked and mashed cowpeas mixed with jaggery,
ghee,
and other ingredients. Thatta payir in sambar
and pulikkuzhambu (spicy semisolid gravy in tamarind
paste) is a popular dish in Tamil Nadu.In Sri Lanka, cowpeas (කවුපි in Sinhala) are cooked in many different ways, one of which is with coconut milk.
In Turkey, cowpeas can be lightly boiled, covered with olive oil, salt, thyme, and garlic sauce, and eaten as an appetizer; they are cooked with garlic and tomatoes; and they can be eaten in bean salad.
Nutrition and health
Cowpeas
provide a rich source of proteins and calories, as well as minerals and
vitamins. A cowpea seed can consist of 25% protein and is low in
anti-nutritional factors. This diet complements the mainly cereal diet in
countries that grow cowpeas as a major food crop.
Production and consumption
Most
cowpeas are grown on the African continent, particularly in Nigeria and Niger
which account for 66% of world cowpea production. The Sahel region also
contains other major producers such as Burkina
Faso, Ghana, Senegal and Mali. Niger is the main exporter of cowpeas and Nigeria the main importer.
Exact figures for cowpea production are hard to come up with as it is not a
major export crop. A 1997 estimate suggests that cowpeas are cultivated on 12.5
million hectares and have a worldwide production of 3 million tonnes. While
they play a key role in subsistence farming and livestock fodder, the cowpea is
also seen as a major cash crop by Central and West African farmers, with an
estimated 200 million people consuming cowpea on a daily basis.According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), as of 2012, the average cowpea yield in Western Africa was an estimated 483 kg/ha, which is still 50% below the estimated potential production yield. In some tradition cropping methods the yield can be as low as 100 kg/ha.
Outside Africa, the major production areas are Asia, Central America, and South America. Brazil is the world's second-leading producer of cowpea seed, producing 600,000 tonnes annually. The amount of protein content of cowpea's leafy parts consumed annually in Africa and Asia is equivalent to 5 million tonnes of dry cowpea seeds, representing as much as 30% of the total food legume production in the lowland tropics.
PRICE
$14.23/KG OR $6.47/IB
For more information:
mobile: +2348039721941
contact person: emeaba uche
e-mail: emeabau@yahoo.com
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