Abstract

Ginger species play an important economic role as medicinal plants, food flavourings, and dietary supplements. Products from ginger, including oil and fresh and dried rhizomes can be used to treat malaria, asthma, headaches, and act as anti-inflammatory and anti-microbial agents. The cultivation of wild plant species can alleviate the pressure from harvesting from the wild. Under cultivation, the major constraints on crop yield and quality are water availability and plant nutrition. Therefore, the impact of water stress on commercial and African ginger was assessed in the rain shelter study. Irrigation treatments were based on the maximum allowable depletion (MAD) levels of plant available water in the root zone (T1: 20–25% MAD, the control; T2: 40–45% MAD; T3: 60–65% MAD; T4: 80–85% MAD). As water stress decreased, the plant height and number of stems per plant of both plant species were positively affected. The number of open stomata was higher for well-watered and less stressed treatments in both ginger species. Higher fresh and dry rhizome yields were recorded for commercial ginger at all water treatments as compared to those from African ginger. In general, water use efficiency (WUE) of fresh and dry rhizome yield was higher for commercial ginger as compared to the indigenous African ginger, while moderately stressed treatments generally resulted in the highest WUE for both species.

Highlights

  • South Africa is characterised by flora that is well known for its abundance in aromatic compounds, currently about 2576 plant species are threatened with extinction due to over-harvesting from the wild [1]

  • Our study has provided much needed information regarding the tolerance of ginger species to different levels of water stress

  • We have shown that growth and development parameter traits, such as height, leaf number, and stem number significantly varied between different species and irrigation treatments

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Summary

Introduction

South Africa is characterised by flora that is well known for its abundance in aromatic compounds, currently about 2576 plant species are threatened with extinction due to over-harvesting from the wild [1]. This includes some species in the genus Zingiber, which belong to the family. Zingiberaceae [2], with African (Siphonochilus aethiopicus) and commercial ginger (Zingiber officinale) belonging to the family This genus is one of the largest genera, comprising of perennial ornamentals and aromatic herbs that are cultivated for valuable medicines [3].

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