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Oil content and fatty acid composition of safflower (Carthamus Tinctorius l.) germplasm

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Date

2025

Author

Kurt, Cemal
Altaf, Muhammad Tanveer
Liaqat, Waqas
Nadeem, Muhammad Azhar
Çil, Ayşe Nuran
Baloch, Faheem Shehzad

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Citation

Kurt, C., Altaf, M. T., Liaqat, W., Nadeem, M. A., Çil, A. N., & Baloch, F. S. (2025). Oil Content and Fatty Acid Composition of Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) Germplasm. Foods, 14(2), 264. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods14020264

Abstract

Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) is a promising oilseed crop with potential applications in the food, pharmaceutical, and industrial sectors. Understanding the oil content and fatty acid composition of safflower germplasm is crucial for breeding programs aimed at enhancing its agronomic and nutritional traits. This study assessed the oil content and fatty acid composition in 87 safflower accessions. Significant variations were observed, with the oil content ranging from 36.88% to 18.44%. Genotype Egypt 1 exhibited the highest oil content. Among fatty acids, China 1 had the highest myristic acid (0.170%) content, while Remzibey had the lowest (0.100%). Palmitic acid ranged from 6.13% to 8.20%, with Egypt 3 and Bangladesh 3 at the extremes. For palmitoleic acid, Jordan 5 had the highest content (0.53%) and Bangladesh 2/Portugal 2 the lowest (0.03%). Linoleic acid varied from 37.7% (China 7) to 77.73% (Iran 1). A correlation analysis indicated strong positive correlations between protein and oil content, as well as between palmitic and myristic acids, and between palmitic and linoleic acids. Conversely, protein exhibited highly negative correlations with myristic, palmitic, and palmitoleic acids. The protein percentage showed a high heritability but a low genetic advance, while palmitic acid, oil percentage, stearic acid, linoleic acid, palmitoleic acid, and oleic acid showed a high heritability and a moderate genetic advance as a percentage of the mean. These findings can aid in developing cultivars with enhanced fatty acids, oil quality, and nutritional value, facilitating sustainable production for a wide range of industrial applications.

Source

Foods

Volume

14

Issue

2

URI

https://doi.org/10.3390/foods14020264
https://hdl.handle.net/11436/10024

Collections

  • Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [5931]
  • Tarla Bitkileri Bölümü Koleksiyonu [50]



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