Abstract

Red peppers are a remarkable source of nutrients in the human diet. However, comprehensive studies have not reported on the effects of genotype, cultivation region, and year on pepper fruit characteristics. To address this, 12 commercial pepper varieties were grown at two locations in South Korea, during 2016 and 2017, representing four environments, and concentrations of proximate, minerals, amino acids, fatty acids, capsaicinoids, and free sugars in pepper pericarps were determined. Variation in most nutrients was observed among the 12 varieties grown within each location in each year, indicating a significant genotype effect. Statistical analysis of combined data showed significant differences among varieties, locations, and years for the measured components. The % variability analysis demonstrated that environment (location and year) and genotype-environment interaction contributed more to the nutritional contents than genotype alone. Particularly, variation in many amino acids, capsaicinoids, free sugars, and myristic acid was attributed to location. Year effect was significant for palmitoleic acid, ash, tryptophan, copper, linolenic acid, crude fiber, and tyrosine. Insoluble dietary fiber, soluble dietary fiber, sodium, sulfate, linoleic acid, and alanine were primarily varied by genotype–environment interaction. Palmitic acid was the trait the most highly affected by genotype. Cultivation and the genotype–environment interaction have a major role in determining the composition of 12 pepper varieties across four environments. The data from this study could explain the natural variation in the compositional data of peppers by genotypes and environments.

Highlights

  • Capsicum annum L. belongs to the Solanaceae family along with other crops such as tomatoes, eggplants and potatoes

  • To investigate variations in nutritional composition among 12 pepper cultivars, we analyzed data within each location per year to exclude the influence of the environment

  • The nutritional composition of the 12 pepper cultivars across four environments are presented in Tables 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 as the mean and ranges

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Summary

Introduction

Capsicum annum L. belongs to the Solanaceae family along with other crops such as tomatoes, eggplants and potatoes. Statistical analysis demonstrated that most components showed significant variation among 12 pepper cultivars, indicating a clear genotypic effect (Additional file 1: Figures S2–S6). The nutritional compounds across the 12 cultivars were compared by location and year, respectively, in order to determine the effect of the environment on composition (Tables 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5).

Results
Conclusion
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