Abstract

Coffea arabica (Arabica) and C. canephora (robusta) almost entirely dominate global coffee production. Various challenges at the production (farm) level, including the increasing prevalence and severity of disease and pests and climate change, indicate that the coffee crop portfolio needs to be substantially diversified in order to ensure resilience and sustainability. In this study, we use a multidisciplinary approach (herbarium and literature review, fieldwork and DNA sequencing) to elucidate the identity, whereabouts, and potential attributes, of two poorly known coffee crop species: C. affinis and C. stenophylla. We show that despite widespread (albeit small-scale) use as a coffee crop species across Upper West Africa and further afield more than 100 years ago, these species are now extremely rare in the wild and are not being farmed. Fieldwork enabled us to rediscover C. stenophylla in Sierra Leone, which previously had not been recorded in the wild there since 1954. We confirm that C. stenophylla is an indigenous species in Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Ivory Coast. Coffea affinis was discovered in the wild in Sierra Leone for the first time, having previously been found only in Guinea and Ivory Coast. Prior to our rediscovery, C. affinis was last seen in the wild in 1941, although sampling of an unidentified herbarium specimen reveals that it was collected in Guinea-Conakry in 2015. DNA sequencing using plastid and ITS markers was used to: (1) confirm the identity of museum and field collected samples of C. stenophylla; (2) identify new accessions of C. affinis; (3) refute hybrid status for C. affinis; (4) identify accessions confused with C. affinis; (5) show that C. affinis and C. stenophylla are closely related, and possibly a single species; (6) substantiate the hybrid C. stenophylla × C. liberica; (7) demonstrate the use of plastid and nuclear markers as a simple means of identifying F1 and early-generation interspecific hybrids in Coffea; (8) infer that C. liberica is not monophyletic; and (9) show that hybridization is possible across all the major groups of key Africa Coffea species (Coffee Crop Wild Relative Priority Groups I and II). Coffea affinis and C. stenophylla may possess useful traits for coffee crop plant development, including taste differentiation, disease resistance, and climate resilience. These attributes would be best accessed via breeding programs, although the species may have niche-market potential via minimal domestication.

Highlights

  • Coffee is a globally significant crop that supports a multibilliondollar global industry (International Coffee Organization (ICO), 2019), over a lengthy value chain from farmer to consumer

  • According to Chevalier (1929), C. stenophylla was being cultivated in quantity in Sierra Leone in the 1890s (c. 1893), and in Guinea, to the extent that is was exported as a commercial product to France

  • Once-cultivated, environments of these two species in Upper West Africa were at relatively low elevations (150–610 m) (Watt, 1908) and that C. stenophylla is reported to withstand dry conditions (Wellman, 1961; Wrigley, 1988), there may be some resilience to high temperatures and low rainfall, compared to the main crop species

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Summary

Introduction

Coffee is a globally significant crop that supports a multibilliondollar global industry (International Coffee Organization (ICO), 2019), over a lengthy value chain from farmer to consumer. Aside from C. arabica, C. canephora, and C. liberica, there are another 121 coffee species known to science (Davis et al, 2006, 2011, 2019) Some of these are used to make the beverage coffee, such as C. congensis, C. eugenioides, and C. racemosa, some have been used in breeding programs, and others have been used as high performing pest and diseases resistant rootstocks (Davis et al, 2019). Robusta gained market share against Arabica from the early 1900s onward due to its resistance to coffee leaf rust (CLR; Hemileia vastatrix) (Wrigley, 1988), a broader agroecological envelope (Davis et al, 2006), higher productivity (Wellman, 1961; Wrigley, 1988), lower purchase price (International Coffee Organization (ICO), 2019), and other specific attributes (Davis et al, 2019). There is an increasing curiosity in lesser known coffee species from the specialty coffee sector, in its quest to discover new and differentiated sensory experiences in coffee

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