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Gossypium barbadense
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| Gossypium barbadense | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Clade: | Angiosperms |
| Clade: | Eudicots |
| Clade: | Rosids |
| Order: | Malvales |
| Family: | Malvaceae |
| Genus: | Gossypium |
| Subgenus: | G. subg. Karpas |
| Species: | G. barbadense
|
| Binomial name | |
| Gossypium barbadense | |

Gossypium barbadense is one of several species of cotton. It is in the mallow family. It has been cultivated since antiquity, but has been especially prized since a form with particularly long fibers was developed in the 19th century. Other names associated with this species include Sea Island, Egyptian, Pima, and extra-long staple (ELS) cotton.
The species is a tropical, frost-sensitive perennial that produces yellow flowers and has black seeds. It grows as a bush or small tree and yields cotton with unusually long, silky fibers.
G. barbadense originated in southwest Ecuador and northwest Peru. It is now cultivated around the world, including China, Egypt, Sudan, India, Australia, Peru, Israel, the southwestern United States, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. It accounts for about 5% of the world's cotton production.
Taxonomy and etymology
[edit]Linnaeus is given credit for describing Gossypium barbadense ("the cotton encountered in Barbados"). Today, this name is universally accepted; however, there is some question whether the modern definition matches what Linnaeus described. Paul A. Fryxell argues, although the evidence surviving from Linnaeus's time is less than ideal, the name is applied correctly. On the other hand, Y. I. Prokhanov and G. K. Brizicky argue that Linnaeus never actually saw any examples of the species we now call G. barbadense.[1]: 64–66
The species is a member of the mallow family, Malvaceae.[note 1] Authors differ on the ranks between family and genus. A recent example that considers cladistics is Bayer et al. (1999).[2]: 739 In this system, G. barbadense and other cottons fall in the subfamily Malvoideae and tribe Gossypiae.[1]: 740 The tribe Gossypiae includes cotton species and others that produce the substance gossypol.[1]
The genus Gossypium encompasses the cottons. The genus can be divided by chromosome count. Subgenus Karpas has 52 chromosomes (four sets of 13). This subgenus encompasses G. barbadense, along with G. hirsutum and a few other New World cottons. In comparison, the commercially important Old World cottons have 26 chromosomes.[1]: 61 Most botanists who study Gossypium believe that the group of cottons with 52 chromosomes forms a clade. In other words, G. barbadense, G. hirsutum, and a few other New World cotton species arose from the same ancestor.[1]
One form of G. barbadense has been recognized as a variety. Var brasiliense is called "kidney seed cotton" because its seeds are fused together into somewhat kidney-shaped masses.[1]: 69
Description
[edit]G. barbadense, like other cottons, forms a small bush in its first year. In cultivation, it is treated as an annual. If allowed to, it can grow into a large bush or even a small tree of height 1–3 m.[3] Leaves are mostly 8–20 cm long, with 3-7 lobes.[3] One distinction between G. barbadense and the more commonly cultivated G. hirsutum is that G. barbadense has three to five lobes whereas G. hirsutum has only three. The lobes of G. barbadense's are also more deeply cut, about two-thirds the length of the leaf, as opposed to one half for G. hirsutum.[1]: 43
Cotton flowers are showy, with five petals that open only partially.[1]: 43–46 The petals are up to 8 cm long, usually yellow.[3] The petals of Sea Island cultivars typically are creamy yellow with a red spot at the base, and as they wither, they turn rose pink. Like other members of the mallow family, the flowers have many stamens, which are merged to form a cylinder around the style.[1]: 58
The seeds and fiber form in a capsule called a "bole". Each bole is divided into three parts, each of which produce 5-8 seeds.[1]: 49 [note 2] The seeds are 8-10 mm long.[3] [note 3][1]: 62
Thousands of years of cultivation have dramatically changed the fiber in cotton plants. Wild cottons have very little fiber, so little it might not be noticed. The fiber emanates from each seed. The purpose of the fiber to wild plants is unknown. Domesticated cottons have much more fiber. Besides the more obvious long fibers, domesticated cotton seeds have short fibers called "linters". Some cultivars of G. barbadense have so few of these short hairs they are often called "lintless".[1]: 53–54 They can also be called "smooth-seeded" as opposed to "fuzzy-seeded" G. hirsutum.
As with all cottons, the bolls open when they mature, revealing showy "snowballs" of fiber.[1]: 53
All cottons contain gossypol, although some cultivars of G. hirsutum have been selected to minimize this chemical. Those cultivars are more susceptible to insect pests, which suggests the natural purpose of gossypol is to deter pests. The impact of gossypol in agriculture is it makes cotton plants poisonous to non-ruminant animals.[1]: 43
Wild forms of G. barbadense have been found in a small area near the Guayas Estuary in Ecuador and an island off of Manta, Ecuador.[1]: 73 It can be grown as a perennial throughout the tropics. It is sensitive to frost. Nevertheless, it can be grown as an annual in regions where the summers are long enough for the bolls to mature.
History
[edit]The earliest known evidence of human use of G. barbadense has been along the coast of present-day Ecuador and Peru. It is plausible humans in that area were also the first to domesticate the species. However, available evidence, such as seeds found in the floors of ancient houses, could be the result of either cultivated or wild-gathered cotton. So far, archaeologists have found evidence of widespread use in this region about 5000 years ago. Further, they have strong evidence at a few sites dating back 5500 years, and weaker evidence as far back as 7800 years.[5] Investigators at one of the circa 5500 year-old sites, in the Ñachoc valley in northern Peru, argue that domestication did not happen there, therefore G. barbasense was domesticated elsewhere and then brought to Ñachoc.[6]
By 1000 BCE, Peruvian cotton bolls were indistinguishable from modern cultivars of G. barbadense. Native Americans grew cotton widely throughout South America and in the West Indies, where Christopher Columbus encountered it. At the time of Columbus, indigenous peoples of the West Indies raised G. barbadense as a dooryard crop, single plants near residences.[1]
The advent of worldwide trade resulted in many kinds of plants being introduced to new places (see Columbian exchange). In the case of cotton, this exchange happened in all directions, new world cottons to the old world, old world cottons to the new world, and cottons to places which they had never grown before. In some cases, this resulted in multiple kinds of cotton growing in the same region. Since then, most of these regions have transitioned to specialize in a particular kind of cotton, resulting in the distinctive market classes of today.[1]: 75
During the 17th century, European colonists in the English West Indies developed cotton as a cash crop for export to Europe, establishing numerous plantations operated by white indentured servants and Black slaves to do so. By the 1650s, Barbados had become the first English colony in the West Indies to export cotton to Europe.[7] By the late 1700s and early 1800s, G. barbadense was a major commercial crop in the West Indies.[1]: 76 After the early 19th century, it was mostly supplanted as a cash crop by sugar cane. There have been a few periods since the early 1800s when cotton production has been attractive in the West Indies, but generally sugar cane has been more profitable.[1]: 84
Classification by staple length
[edit]Cotton traders use many systems to classify the quality of cotton fiber. One of the most significant distinctions is "staple length", length of the individual fibers. Traditionally, cultivars of Gossypium barbadense fall into the "long-staple" category. The term extra-long-staple (ELS) first came into use in 1907. The International Cotton Advisory Committee, in an attempt to standardize classification, defined extra-long-staple as 1+3⁄8 inches (35 mm) or longer, and long-staple as 1+1⁄8 to 1+5⁄16 inches (29 to 33 mm). Under this classification scheme, most cultivars of G. barbadense produce extra-long-staple fibers, but some cultivars qualify as long-staple.[1]: 56
Cultivation
[edit]G. barbadense is now cultivated around the world, including China, Egypt, Sudan, India, Australia, Peru, Israel, the southwestern United States, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.[1]: 73–74 The species accounts for about 5% of the world's cotton production.[1]: 88 Certain regions specialize in G. barbadense. One reason is to prevent different species of cotton from hybridizing with each other. If a field of G. barbadense is too close to a field of a different species, the result is generally poor quality of the fiber.[1]: 49
G. barbadense organized by market class
[edit]Traders in cotton have developed several broad categories called market classes. These categories are based on the characteristics of the fiber and the region where they are produced. In the United States, some market classes have been formalized in law.
Sea Island cotton
[edit]Sea Island is a historical market class. It was actively marketed from 1790[1]: 314 to 1920.[1] It was grown on the Sea Islands, islands off the coast of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.[1]: xvii It once was an important market class. In the markets of Europe, it suffered little competition from cottons with similar characteristics from its inception until the interruption of trade resulting from the U.S. Civil War.[1]: 334
Origins of Sea Island
[edit]The origins of Sea Island cotton has been the subject of considerable controversy. Nevertheless, developing the market class required developing cultivars that would be productive in the Sea Islands, and developing a product that was distinct from other kinds of cotton.[1]: 89 It also required at least some producers and consumers to agree "Sea Island" was a useful category.
One of the challenges explaining the development of a long fiber cotton that would thrive in the Sea Islands is that the cotton in the Sea Islands came from the West Indies, an area where all the cultivated cotton was short fiber (by today's standards) and required a long growing season. A distinctive cotton could not be developed in the Sea Islands, at least not by the methods of hybridization or selection, because frost killed the plants before they had a chance to produce seed.[1]: 91–93
One possible explanation was that the changes happened accidentally in a region with long growing season and then were introduced to the Sea Islands. In the 1960s and 1970s, S. G. Stephens performed an experiment where he hybridized a G. barbadense with short coarse fibers and long growing season with a wild form of G. hirsutum that had the same short fiber and long growing season, but the fibers were fine. It seemed reasonable the resulting plant produced fine fibers, but was surprised to find it also had long fiber and short growing season. He then demonstrated this could be rather easily back-hybridized (see introgression) to form a cotton that retained these desirable characteristics, yet was almost entirely G. barbadense. He argued that such an event could have happened accidentally in the 18th century, resulting in the long, fine fiber G. barbadense of today. However, since this event could not have happened in the Sea Islands, it is not sufficient to explain the Sea Islands' distinctive product.[1]
Unusual weather in 1785 and 1786 helped develop G. barbadense production in the Sea Islands. According to historical records, planters in Georgia were trying to introduce G. barbadense, but the plants would die from frost before they could produce seed or fiber. However, the winter of 1785-1786 was particularly mild, so a few plants did succeed in producing seed. The next generation of plants was able to produce seed and fiber before the winter.[1]: 93–95
Historical records credit Kinsey Burden of developing the particularly high-quality cotton that came to be associated with the Sea Islands. He accomplished this in the first decade of the 1800s via seed selection on Burden's Island and Johns Island in South Carolina.[1]: 96 The Sea Islands region parted ways with the rest of the southeastern United States, specializing in this high-quality G. barbadense. Meanwhile, the rest of the southeastern United States developed its own market class "upland".
By 1803, the Charleston SC market recognized class distinctions of Sea Island, South Carolina upland, West Indian, and Mississippi.[8]
What was called Sea Island cotton was cultivated on the Sea Islands, along the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia, especially by the late 18th century. Sea Island cotton commanded the highest price of all the cottons because of its long staple (1.5 to 2.5 inches, 38 to 64 mm) and silky texture; it was used for the finest cotton counts and often mixed with silk.
Although planters tried to grow it on the uplands of Georgia, the quality was inferior,[9] and it was too expensive to process. The invention of the cotton gin by the end of the 18th century utterly changed the production of cotton as a commodity crop. It made processing of short-staple cotton profitable. This cotton, known as upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), could be grown successfully in the interior uplands. Short-staple cotton became the prime commodity crop of the developing Deep South, and King Cotton was the basis of southern wealth in the antebellum years. This cotton in the early 21st century represents about 95% of U.S. production.
Among the earliest planters of Sea Island cotton in North America was an Englishman, Francis Levett. Other cotton planters came from Barbados. At the outbreak of the American Revolution, Levett left his Georgia plantation and went to the Bahamas. He attempted to introduce cotton production, but failed. Sugar cane had been a more important commodity crop.
Sea Island cultivars
[edit]Sea Island planters could buy seed to plant each year, or they could plant seed saved from the previous year. Named cultivars resulted when particular planters gained a reputation for selecting the best seed to replant. Examples include "Seabrook", named after plantation proprietor William Seabrook, and "Bleak Hall", named after the plantation John Townsend managed.[1]: 315 An incident in the early 20th century illustrates the importance of seed selection. The best seed selectors, in order to stop planters in the West Indies from benefiting from their work, they quit selling seed, even to their neighbors. This resulted in a decline in quality across the Sea Island region.[1]: 105
Demise of Sea Island
[edit]Sea island never fully recovered from the disruptions of the U.S. Civil War.[1]: 136 In the early 20th century, the boll weevil caused tremendous damage in the traditional cotton-growing regions of the United States. Sea Island cultivars were particularly susceptible. Also, wet conditions on the islands moderated soil temperatures, further favoring the insect.[1]: 291–292 Production of Sea Island on a commercial scale ended in 1920.[1]: 332
Egyptian
[edit]Egyptian is a market class representing G. barbadense grown in Egypt, and it also includes crops in Sudan, which was once part of Egypt. Sometimes the terms "Egyptian long-staple" and "Egyptian extra-long staple" are used, as Egypt and Sudan produce cottons with a variety of fiber lengths.
The development of the market class started in 1820, when Jumel's cotton entered commercial production. This was a type of cotton that had been growing in the region for some time, but a French engineer named Jumel recognized its potential as a source of fiber when he saw it growing as an ornamental in a garden in Cairo. Based on its description, it seems likely it was the recently developed long fiber kind of G. barbadense from the New World. Encouraged by the success of Jumel's cotton, Egyptians tested other seeds, including Sea Island. The next major cultivar in Egypt, "early Ashmouni," likely was a hybrid between Jumel and a Sea Island cultivar. Likewise, the following major cultivar, "Mit Afifi," likely was a hybrid between early Ashmouni and a Sea Island cultivar. Many more cultivars followed.[1]
In the last half of the 19th century, cotton production in Egypt grew dramatically because of expansion of irrigation and increased demand because of the United States civil war. Egyptian cotton has been important ever since.[1]: 82–83
Pima
[edit]Pima is a name often used for cotton grown in the Southwestern United States. This market class consists of extra-long G. barbadense. It was originally known as "American Egyptian", but eventually the name "Pima" became more popular. Since the name "Pima" also has been applied to extra-long staple cotton growing in countries such as Peru, Australia, and Israel,[10] sometimes the name "American Pima" is used to clarify the origin. The name "American Pima" was formally adopted by the United States government in 1970.[11]
The American Pima market class was the result of government efforts to enable United States farmers to compete in the "Egyptian cotton" market. Circa 1900, the United States led in production of all the major market classes except Egyptian. H. J. Webber and others in the United States Department of Agriculture believed Egyptian long-staple would thrive under irrigation in the deserts of the southwestern United States. On behalf of the USDA, David Fairchild visited Egypt in 1902 and brought back a few Egyptian cultivars. A USDA team led by Thomas H. Kearney selected among these cultivars,[note 4] and after a decade of refinement, released the first cultivar successful in the southwestern United States.
This first commercially successful cultivar was named "Yuma", after the Arizona town near the experiment station where it was developed. Kearney's second successful cultivar was "Pima".[note 5] The cultivar Pima dominated irrigated lands in the southwestern United States from 1918 to as late as 1941, when other cultivars became more popular.[1]: 84–87
As of 2005, American Pima accounts for less than 5% of U.S. cotton production. It is grown chiefly in California, with small acreages in West Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.[14]
Tanguis
[edit]Although Tanguis represents a tiny fraction of the worldwide market, it is remarkable because it was developed relatively recently from local populations in G. barbadense's home territory of Peru. Although it produces fiber shorter and rougher than other modern market classes, it has unique properties useful for certain industrial applications.[1]: 88 It accounts for the majority of Peru's cotton production (about 80% in 2011).[15]
Uses
[edit]Most G. barbadense production comes from cultivars that produce particularly long fiber, and most of that is made into clothing. Fine (thin) yarn requires long fiber. In turn, this thin yarn is required for intermediate products like lace and high thread-count cloth. The long-fiber cultivars also tend to have particularly strong fibers, making them useful for various industrial products. Historically, G. barbadense has been used for the cords of automobile tires and cloth for aircraft wings.[1]: 85 It is also used for sewing machine thread.[1]: 277
G. barbadense fiber is also used for some luxury goods where the fiber qualities are less important than the reputation of the best quality materials.
Sometimes the same names that are used to describe market classes are also used to describe finished items. However, the reputations of the names "Egyptian" and to a lesser extent "Pima" have been degraded by items made of lower quality fiber. To overcome this difficulty, a group of American Pima growers established the name Supima for finished products. This group of growers hold trademark rights, enabling them to enforce quality and origin requirements for Supima products.
Small quantities of Tanguis and other short-fibered cultivars are grown for specialized purposes.[1]
G. barbadense can be used as a source of cottonseed oil and animal feed. However, other kinds of cotton generally are preferred because G. barbadense seeds contain more of the undesirable substance gossypol.[1]: 50
Notes
[edit]- ^ There have always been problems delineating the scope of Malvaceae.[2] With respect to G. barbadense and the other cottons, this has sometimes led to them being placed in the family Bombacaceae rather than Malvaceae.[1]: 58
- ^ Some historical records identify G. barbadense as "black-seeded" as opposed to "green-seeded" G. hirsutum. Nevertheless, some kinds of G. hirsutum have black seeds.[4]
- ^ However, in variety brasiliense "kidney seed cotton" each group of seeds is fused together in a somewhat kidney-shaped mass.
- ^ Sources differ which Egyptian cultivar became the basis for American Pima. Fairchild says it was Jannovich[12] whereas Kearnsey said Mit Afifi.[1]: 85
- ^ The market class "Pima" was almost certainly named after the cultivar "Pima". Sources differ on the origin of the name of the cultivar. The botanist Porcher and the historian Bess say it was named after the Gila River Indian Community (Pima Reservation), the home of the cooperative testing and demonstration farm where the cultivar was developed.[1][13]: 126 Many other sources, such as a glossary published by the Congressional Research Service, say it was named in honor of the Akimel O'odham (Pima Indians) who helped raise the cotton at the demonstration farm.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av Porcher, Richard D.; Fick, Sarah (2005). The story of Sea Island cotton. Charleston, South Carolina: Wyrick & Company. ISBN 0-941711-73-0.
- ^ a b Weakley, Alan S. (May 21, 2015). Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Herbarium.: 739
- ^ a b c d "Gossypium barbadense L." Plants of the World Online. Kew Science. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
- ^ Stephens, S. G. (April 1976). "The origin of sea island cotton". Agricultural History. 50 (2): 393.
- ^ Beresford-Jones, David; Pullen, Alexander; Chauca, George; Cadwallader, Lauren; García, Maria; Salvatierra, Isabel; Whaley, Oliver; Vásquez, Víctor; Arce, Susana; Lane, Kevin; French, Charles (2018). "Refining the Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization: How Plant Fiber Technology Drove Social Complexity During the Preceramic Period". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 25 (2): 393–425. doi:10.1007/s10816-017-9341-3. ISSN 1573-7764. PMC 5953975. PMID 29782575.
- ^ Dillehay, Tom D.; Rossen, Jack; Andres, Thomas C.; Williams, David E. (2007-06-29). "Preceramic adoption of peanut, squash, and cotton in northern Peru". Science. 316 (5833): 1890–1893. doi:10.1126/science.1141395. ISSN 1095-9203. JSTOR 20036586. PMID 17600214.
- ^ Sauer, J.D. (1993). Historical Geography of Crop Plants: a Select Roster. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-8901-1.
- ^ Gray, L. C. (1933). History of agriculture in the southern United States to 1860. Vol. 2. The Carnegie Institution of Washington. pp. 718–719.
- ^ Ecroyd, S., ed. (1910). Cotton Year Book 1910. The Textile Mercury. pp. 12–13.
- ^ Estur, Gerald, ed. (2007). Cotton Exporter's Guide. Geneva: International Trade Centre, UNCTAD/ World Trade Organization. p. 215.
- ^ A Chronological Summary of Major Events in the Development of U. S. Cotton Standards (PDF). United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Marketing Service, Cotton Division. p. 43. Retrieved Aug 30, 2020.
- ^ Stone, Daniel (2018). The Food Explorer. New York: Dutton. p. 138. ISBN 9781101990582. LCCN 2017030324.
- ^ Bess, Jennifer (2021). Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing: The Akimel O'odham and Cycles of Agricultural Transformation in the Phoenix Basin. University of Colorado Press.
- ^ a b Womach, Jasper (June 16, 2005). Agriculture: A Glossary of Terms, Programs, and Laws, 2005 Edition. Congressional Research Service, The Library of Congress. p. 90. Archived from the original on March 30, 2021.
- ^ Nolte, Gaspar E. (Apr 26, 2012). Peru Cotton Situation (PDF). Global Agricultural Information Network, USDA Foreign Agricultural Service. Retrieved Aug 30, 2020.
External links
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Media related to Gossypium barbadense at Wikimedia Commons
Data related to Gossypium barbadense at Wikispecies
Gossypium barbadense
View on GrokipediaTaxonomy and Etymology
Taxonomic Classification
Gossypium barbadense L. is a species within the genus Gossypium, classified under the family Malvaceae, order Malvales, class Magnoliopsida, phylum Tracheophyta, and kingdom Plantae.[10][11] The binomial name was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 work Species Plantarum, volume 2, page 693, establishing its taxonomic placement based on morphological characteristics observed in specimens from the Americas.[10] In cladistic terms, G. barbadense belongs to the clade Angiosperms (flowering plants), clade Eudicots, and clade Rosids, reflecting its evolutionary position among vascular plants with enclosed seeds and dicotyledonous features such as net-veined leaves and two cotyledons.[12] This species is a tetraploid (2n=4x=52 chromosomes) member of the AD genome group, distinguishing it from diploid Old World cottons like G. arboreum and G. herbaceum, which arose from allopolyploidy involving an A-genome diploid from Africa-Asia and a D-genome diploid from the Americas.[13] Synonyms include Gossypium evertum, though the Linnaean epithet barbadense—referring to its association with Barbados—remains the accepted name in major herbaria and genetic databases.[3] Placement in subfamily Malvoideae and tribe Gossypieae further specifies its relation to other cotton species, with genetic evidence confirming its New World origin distinct from Asiatic diploids.Etymology and Common Names
The binomial name Gossypium barbadense was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in Species Plantarum (1753), with the habitat noted as Barbados, from which the specific epithet barbadense—meaning "of or from Barbados"—derives, reflecting the site's role in early European documentation of the cultivated plant despite its native South American provenance.[14] [15] The genus name Gossypium stems from the New Latin form of Latin gossypion, an ancient term for cotton, itself tracing to Greek gossypion denoting the soft, downy fiber.[16] Common names for G. barbadense emphasize its regional cultivation histories and exceptional fiber attributes, including Sea Island cotton (from 18th–19th-century plantations along the U.S. Atlantic Sea Islands), Pima cotton (honoring the Pima Indigenous group in Arizona, where varieties were selected in the early 20th century), Egyptian cotton (linked to long-staple cultivars bred in the Nile Delta since the 1820s), extra-long staple cotton (distinguishing fibers over 34 mm in length), and Creole cotton (used in Caribbean contexts for local strains).[17] [18] [3]Botanical Description
Morphological Features
Gossypium barbadense is a perennial shrub or subshrub, typically reaching heights of 1–4 meters, occasionally arborescent, with stems that are woody, erect, branching, and smooth to slightly pubescent or sparsely stellate-pubescent.[19][20] The branchlets are often dark purple and angular, supporting a bushy growth habit in tropical conditions.[19] Leaves are spirally arranged, with blades measuring 5–20 cm in length and often wider than long (5–15 cm wide), deeply divided into 3–7 lobes extending beyond the middle, the lobes ovate to lanceolate and acuminate, featuring a basal gland on the lower midvein surface.[19][20] Petioles comprise one-third to three-quarters of the blade length, while stipules are 1–5 cm long, subulate to falcate or linear to ovate; the leaves are pedately 5–9-veined with coarse venation and heart-shaped outline.[19][20] Flowers occur solitary in leaf axils or in sympodial inflorescences, with pedicels 1–4 cm long bearing three subterminal fringed nectaries; involucral bracteoles are broadly cordate, 4–7 cm long, and bear 3–17 lacerate teeth.[19][20] The calyx measures 8–10 mm, subentire to toothed; petals are 4.5–8 cm long, pale yellow with a dark red or purple basal spot, fading to dull reddish or pinkish purple; the staminal column is about 2.5 cm, and the style exceeds the androecium.[19][20] The fruit is a 3-locular capsule, narrowly ovoid to elongate and beaked, 3–6 cm long, glabrous, densely pitted, and black-punctate, dehiscing loculicidally to reveal seeds 8–10 mm long covered in copious long white lint but lacking short fuzz fibers.[19][20][2] Several seeds per locule are distinct or connate, encased within the lint.[20] The root system features a robust taproot with lateral roots often arranged in four rows.[21]Fiber and Seed Characteristics
Gossypium barbadense produces extra-long staple fibers prized for their length, typically 30–40 mm, with select varieties extending to 64 mm, which supports the manufacture of fine, durable textiles. These fibers are finer, stronger, and more lustrous than those of Gossypium hirsutum, featuring low micronaire values indicative of superior fineness and high tensile strength that exceeds upland cotton standards.[2][9][22][23] Fiber elongation in G. barbadense is moderate, typically 6–8%, balancing extensibility with resilience during spinning and weaving processes. The species' fibers also exhibit enhanced cell wall composition, including differences in xyloglucan content, contributing to their overall quality metrics over developmental stages.[24][25] Seeds of G. barbadense are kidney-shaped with a dark brown to black seed coat and generally low fuzz density, contrasting with the denser fuzz coverage on G. hirsutum seeds. Fuzz fibers, where present, measure 2–7 mm in length, appear more cylindrical, and possess thicker walls than the primary lint fibers, which can reach up to 3.5 cm.[26][2][27][28] Many cultivars show reduced fuzz, aiding mechanical ginning by minimizing residual short fibers post-lint removal, though this trait varies genetically and can be influenced by environmental factors like low temperatures during early boll development. Seed viability remains high in early-harvested bolls, supporting propagation, but lint percentage on seeds is lower than in upland cotton, prioritizing fiber elongation over seed fuzz volume.[13][29]Evolutionary Origins and Domestication
Prehistoric Origins in the Americas
Gossypium barbadense, one of five tetraploid species in the genus Gossypium, evolved in the Americas following allopolyploid speciation approximately 1–2 million years ago from progenitors originating in the Old World. Its wild forms are native to the arid coastal zones of northwestern South America, particularly along the Pacific shores of present-day Ecuador and Peru, where natural populations persist in disturbed habitats like sandy beaches and riverbanks. These wild ancestors exhibit small bolls, short fibers, and indehiscent fruits that do not readily open to disperse seeds, traits that posed selective pressures for early human intervention.[30] Archaeological records reveal initial human exploitation of G. barbadense in preceramic contexts, with seeds and fiber impressions in coastal sites indicating gathering or incipient management as early as 7,000–8,000 years before present. The oldest direct evidence of cultivation emerges from the Ñanchoc Valley in northern Peru's Andean foothills, dated to around 5,500 calibrated years ago (approximately 3500 BCE), where cotton remains were recovered from garden plots, irrigation features, and tools alongside peanuts and squash, suggesting integrated horticulture by mobile foragers. Further south, in central coastal Peru's Ancón-Chillón region, domesticated forms appear by 2500 BCE, with boll fragments and textiles from sites like Huaca Prieta demonstrating use for fishing nets and fabrics predating maize and pottery. These early specimens represent primitive cultivars morphologically akin to wild types, featuring fuzzless seeds and rudimentary fiber elongation.[31][32] Domestication of G. barbadense proceeded independently in northwestern South America around 4,000–5,000 years ago, likely in the Peruvian Andes and adjacent lowlands, driven by selection for larger bolls, reduced seed dispersal, and improved fiber quality to support textile production. Ancient DNA analyses of remains from sites spanning over 3,000 years and 2,000 miles show genomic stability, with minimal transposable element activity distinguishing wild and early cultivated lineages, underscoring gradual adaptation without major punctuations until later breeding. This prehistoric development laid the foundation for regional variants, spreading inland via irrigation networks by 1000 BCE, when boll morphology began approximating modern standards.[33][34]Domestication and Early Cultivation
Gossypium barbadense was domesticated from wild populations in the coastal regions of northwestern Peru and southwestern Ecuador, where its allotetraploid ancestors diverged from Gossypium hirsutum approximately 0.4–0.6 million years ago.[7] Archaeological evidence from coastal Peru indicates early use and cultivation of cotton dating to at least 7,800 years ago, with domesticated forms—characterized by non-shattering bolls and improved fiber qualities—evident by around 4,500 years before present in southern coastal sites.[30] Genetic analyses of 201 accessions reveal a domestication bottleneck, with strong selection signatures for fiber elongation and boll retention, alongside introgression from wild Gossypium hirsutum that enhanced adaptability during early human-mediated expansion.[30] Early cultivation centered on selective breeding by indigenous Andean and coastal societies, prioritizing traits for textile production such as fishing nets, clothing, and storage bags, as seen in middens from sites like Ancón-Chillón on Peru's central coast around 2,500 BCE.[32] Preceramic period remains from Huaca Prieta further document domesticated cotton predating widespread maize agriculture, with boll sizes and shapes approaching modern varieties by 1,000 BCE.[32] Over 4,000–8,000 years, cultivation spread trans-Andean into northern South America, Central America, the Caribbean, and Pacific islands, driven by human migration and trade, though remaining distinct from Mesoamerican Gossypium hirsutum domestication.[30] This pre-Columbian dissemination laid the foundation for G. barbadense's role in indigenous economies, supported by whole-genome resequencing showing low genetic diversity consistent with founder effects from initial domestication foci.[30]Historical Spread and Development
Post-Columbian Introduction to the Old World
Gossypium barbadense, native to the Americas, was introduced to Africa, Asia, and the Pacific Islands following the European discovery of the New World in 1492.[13][2] This dispersal occurred amid the Columbian exchange, as European powers such as the Portuguese and Spanish transported seeds and plants from American colonies to their trading networks and possessions in the Old World.[35] The species entered regions where Old World cottons (Gossypium arboreum and G. herbaceum) had long been cultivated, particularly in tropical and subtropical areas of Africa and Asia, where short-staple varieties supported local textile industries.[35] Early introductions likely proceeded through maritime routes, with seeds carried from South American domestication centers—such as northwest Peru and southwest Ecuador—or from expanded cultivation in the Caribbean and Brazil to African coastal enclaves and Asian ports under Portuguese influence.[11] By the 18th century, records indicate establishment in parts of Africa, where the plant's adaptation to similar tropical climates facilitated initial trials, though commercial dominance developed later.[36] In Asia, dissemination built on existing cotton-growing traditions, gradually integrating G. barbadense's superior fiber length—often exceeding 1.5 inches—into selective breeding efforts, displacing less productive indigenous species in suitable agroecological zones.[35] The introduction marked a pivotal shift in global cotton genetics, as G. barbadense hybridized sporadically with local diploids, enhancing fiber quality but also introducing vulnerabilities to pests and diseases in non-native environments.[8] While Old World adoption was uneven due to climatic mismatches in temperate Europe—limiting it largely to experimental or greenhouse cultivation—the species' spread to equatorial Africa and monsoon Asia laid groundwork for 19th-century varieties like those in Egypt and India.[35] This post-Columbian transfer underscores the role of colonial trade in reshaping agrarian economies, with G. barbadense contributing to higher-value exports despite initial propagation challenges from seed dormancy and photoperiod sensitivity.[13]19th-Century Advancements and Regional Adaptations
In the 19th century, selective breeding of Gossypium barbadense focused on enhancing fiber length and quality to meet surging demand from mechanized textile mills in Europe and the United States, resulting in varieties prized for their extra-long staples exceeding 1.25 inches, which produced finer, stronger yarns unsuitable for short-staple G. hirsutum.[8] These advancements built on earlier introductions, emphasizing natural selection in diverse climates and manual ginning techniques adapted for delicate fibers to prevent breakage.[37] Regional adaptations in the American Southeast centered on Sea Island cotton, a G. barbadense variant cultivated on coastal barrier islands of Georgia and South Carolina, where sandy, well-drained soils and a frost-free growing season of 200+ days enabled premium fiber production; by 1800, it dominated Lowcountry commerce, yielding bales that fetched prices double those of upland cotton due to superior luster and uniformity.[38][39] Planters like William Elliott refined strains imported around 1790, optimizing spacing and organic manuring to combat boll rot while relying on tidal flooding for natural pest deterrence.[40] In Egypt, G. barbadense—known as "Makko" or Jumel cotton—was introduced in 1821 by Louis Alexis Jumel from Sea Island stock near Cairo, adapting rapidly to the Nile Delta's alluvial soils and basin irrigation systems, which supported double-cropping rotations with winter cereals.[41][37] Production exploded during the American Civil War (1861–1865), rising from 50 million to 250 million pounds annually as European mills sought alternatives to disrupted U.S. supplies, with varieties like Giza selected for heat tolerance and yield under perennial irrigation.[42] American breeders cross-pollinated G. barbadense with Egyptian imports throughout the century, laying groundwork for Southwest adaptations in arid regions like Arizona and California, where drip-like furrow irrigation and alkali-tolerant strains addressed water scarcity and saline soils, foreshadowing 20th-century Pima varieties.[43] These efforts prioritized fiber purity over volume, with experimental farms testing hybrids for boll size and disease resistance amid expanding rail networks facilitating seed distribution.[44]Varieties and Classification
Classification by Staple Length and Quality
Gossypium barbadense is renowned for producing extra-long staple (ELS) cotton fibers, typically exceeding 35 mm in length, which distinguishes it from shorter-staple species like Gossypium hirsutum and enables superior yarn fineness, strength, and uniformity in textile applications.[9][45] This ELS classification arises from the species' genetic predisposition for elongated cellulose deposition during fiber development, resulting in averages of 1 3/8 inches (35 mm) or more, often reaching 40 mm or beyond in select varieties.[46][47] Fiber quality in G. barbadense is assessed via multiple parameters beyond length, including tensile strength (typically >28 g/tex), micronaire (fineness index of 3.5–4.9, indicating optimal maturity and diameter), length uniformity (>84%), and low short fiber content (<10%), all of which correlate with reduced yarn breakage and enhanced fabric durability.[48][49] These traits stem from the species' tetraploid genome, which supports denser cellulose packing and finer fiber profiles compared to upland cottons.[7]| Staple Category | Fiber Length Range | Key Quality Attributes | Associated Species Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long Staple (LS) | 28–34 mm | Moderate strength (20–28 g/tex), good uniformity; suitable for mid-grade yarns | Select G. hirsutum varieties[49] |
| Extra-Long Staple (ELS) | >35 mm (up to 65 mm) | High strength (>28 g/tex), fineness (micronaire 3.5–4.9), low short fibers (<10%); yields premium, lustrous fabrics | G. barbadense (e.g., Pima, Egyptian)[50][9][45] |
Sea Island Cotton
Sea Island cotton is a premium cultivar of Gossypium barbadense, distinguished by its extra-long staple fibers exceeding 34 mm in length, often reaching 36–37 mm or more, which provide exceptional fineness, strength, uniformity, luster, and a silky texture ideal for high-end textiles.[51][52][53] These fibers exhibit low micronaire values, high twist per inch for absorbency, and an eggshell hue, making the cotton resistant to pilling and superior in durability compared to shorter-staple varieties like Upland cotton (G. hirsutum).[54][55] The variety emerged around 1790 through selective breeding in the Sea Islands off Georgia and South Carolina, where the G. barbadense species—domesticated in South America over 6,000 years ago along the coasts of Ecuador and Peru—adapted to coastal conditions after post-Columbian introduction.[54][52] It flourished in the Lowcountry's sandy, well-drained soils, with plants growing up to 8 feet tall, requiring hand-picking and roller ginning to preserve fiber integrity; production peaked in profitability during the mid-19th century, accounting for a significant portion of premium exports until the Civil War disrupted labor systems.[54] Commercial viability collapsed after the boll weevil infestation reached the region in 1918, rendering large-scale cultivation uneconomical by 1940, though seeds such as the Bleak Hall strain were preserved in the USDA vault since 1939.[54] Efforts to revive it in the U.S. began in 2015 with small demonstration plots on Edisto Island, emphasizing its potential for luxury and engineering uses due to inherent fiber qualities.[54] Today, genuine Sea Island cotton production is limited to certified West Indian strains in the Caribbean, including Antigua, Barbados, and Jamaica, yielding only about 150 bales annually worldwide—representing 0.0004% of global long-staple output—and hand-harvested to maintain quality amid vulnerabilities to pests like boll weevils and diseases such as Fusarium wilt.[52][51] These cultivars retain thermal shock resistance from stable island climates, ensuring fiber consistency for elite shirting and apparel.[51]Egyptian Cotton
Egyptian cotton designates extra-long staple cultivars of Gossypium barbadense developed and grown primarily in Egypt, valued for producing exceptionally fine, strong, and lustrous fibers suitable for high-end textiles.[28] These varieties trace their lineage to the species' native origins in coastal Peru and Ecuador, with seeds introduced to Egypt in the early 19th century from South American or Caribbean sources, coinciding with Muhammad Ali Pasha's efforts to modernize agriculture and expand cash crop production along the Nile River.[2] Unlike ancient Egyptian cotton, which derived from Old World species such as Gossypium herbaceum, modern Egyptian cotton represents an adaptation of New World G. barbadense to the Nile Valley's fertile, silt-laden soils and subtropical climate, enhancing fiber elongation and quality through selective breeding.[56] Prominent varieties include the Giza series, bred by Egypt's Agricultural Research Center, such as Giza 45, Giza 87, Giza 90, Giza 94, and Giza 95, which exhibit staple lengths typically exceeding 35 mm—qualifying as extra-long staple (ELS) per International Cotton Advisory Committee standards of 1⅜ inches (35 mm) or longer.[57] Giza 45, often termed the "queen" of Egyptian cottons, features fibers up to 38 mm with superior uniformity, fineness (micronaire around 3.8), and tensile strength, outperforming many peers in radiance, maturity, and elongation metrics.[58][59] These attributes yield yarns that are smoother, more durable, and less prone to pilling than shorter-staple cottons, commanding premiums of 40-70% in fabric markets due to reduced breakage during spinning and enhanced fabric hand-feel.[59] Compared to other G. barbadense types like American Pima, Egyptian cultivars often demonstrate higher fiber strength and consistency from generations of localized selection, though quality varies by specific strain and growing conditions.[57] Cultivation concentrates in the Nile Delta (e.g., varieties Giza 86 and 94) and Upper Egypt (e.g., Giza 90 and 95), where perennial irrigation from the Nile supports planting from mid-March to mid-May and hand-harvesting from September to mid-December.[60] Egypt's output emphasizes ELS grades for export, with 2024 projections around 100,000 metric tons total cotton but a smaller fraction as premium Egyptian varieties, reflecting a shift toward quality amid challenges like water scarcity and synthetic competition.[61][62] The fiber's inherent properties—longer, finer, and more uniform than upland Gossypium hirsutum—underpin its reputation for breathable, luxurious applications in bedding and apparel, though authentic labeling remains critical given widespread misattribution in consumer markets.[63] Bedding sets made from Egyptian cotton, often referred to as "parures" in French-speaking markets, with a metric thread density of 90 fils/cm² (equivalent to approximately 230 thread count in percale weave), are considered good quality for everyday luxury bedding. This density provides softness, breathability, and durability owing to the long-staple fibers characteristic of Gossypium barbadense. Higher densities (e.g., 100+ fils/cm²) may feel smoother, but 90 fils/cm² represents a solid mid-range option commonly used by reputable brands.[64]Pima Cotton
Pima cotton refers to cultivars of Gossypium barbadense selected for extra-long staple (ELS) fibers, typically 1.4 to 2 inches (35 to 50 mm) in length, which exceed the 0.875 to 1.312 inches (22 to 33 mm) of upland cotton (G. hirsutum).[65] [66] These fibers are 100% natural cotton fibers composed primarily of cellulose, exhibiting greater strength, softness, smoothness, fineness, and uniformity compared to upland cotton fibers. This enables production of smoother, more lustrous yarns with reduced pilling and higher durability in end-use textiles. It is commonly known as the "cashmere of cotton" due to its luxurious qualities.[67] [68] In finished products such as shirts and apparel, authentic Pima cotton can be distinguished by checking the care label for specific designations such as "100% Pima Cotton," "Supima," or, for Peruvian-grown varieties, "100% Pima Peruano" or "100% Algodão Peruano." Labels stating only "100% cotton" or "100% algodão" typically indicate regular upland cotton rather than Pima. The fabric itself is exceptionally soft and silky-smooth, cool to the touch, with excellent drape, brilliant shine, and uniformity without irregularities, offering a distinctly luxurious and durable feel compared to standard cotton fabrics.[69] [70] The variety originated from breeding efforts by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in the early 1900s, incorporating germplasm from Sea Island cotton (G. barbadense selections from the U.S. Southeast) and Egyptian cotton varieties, with initial field trials in Arizona around 1909–1910.[71] It was named in recognition of the Pima (Tohono O'odham) tribe's assistance in early cultivation experiments on tribal lands in Arizona, leading to commercial release as "American Pima" by 1915.[72] [73] While G. barbadense traces to prehistoric domestication in coastal Peru circa 8000 years ago, U.S. Pima represents a distinct adaptation for arid Southwest conditions, differing from Peruvian or other international strains in fiber metrics and yield potential.[8] Commercial Pima production is concentrated in the U.S. Southwest, including Arizona (historically the largest producer), California, Texas, and New Mexico, where it comprises 3–5% of total U.S. cotton output as of 2023, with global Pima-equivalent G. barbadense production exceeding 1 million metric tons annually, representing approximately 3% of global cotton production, led by Peru and the U.S.[74] Yields average 500–800 pounds of lint per acre, roughly half that of upland cotton, attributable to lower boll set, thinner leaves, and greater sensitivity to verticillium wilt and lygus bugs, though irrigation and precise management in desert soils mitigate these limitations.[75] Premium pricing, often 1.5–2 times that of upland, reflects its quality, with certified "Supima" branding (covering 100% U.S.-grown Pima since 1971) ensuring traceability and supporting niche markets in high-end apparel and sheeting.[76]Tanguis and Other Hybrids
Tanguis cotton, a variety of Gossypium barbadense, originated in Peru through selective breeding efforts initiated by Fermín Tanguis, a Puerto Rican agriculturist, around 1905 to address wilt disease (Fusarium vasinfectum) that had decimated local cotton crops in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[77][78] Tanguis achieved this by hybridizing introduced American Pima cotton (G. barbadense) germplasm with indigenous Peruvian strains, yielding plants with enhanced disease resistance, improved yield under arid coastal conditions, and fibers measuring 1.1–1.3 inches in length—longer and stronger than typical upland cotton but coarser and with more convolutions than elite Pima varieties.[79][80] By 1911, stable hybrid lines were established, and by the 1920s, Tanguis dominated Peruvian production, comprising over 90% of the nation's cotton output and enabling export growth despite environmental challenges like low rainfall and saline soils.[81][82] This variety's fibers, characterized by high twist potential and durability, supported coarser textile applications such as denim and workwear, though they lack the fineness of Sea Island or Egyptian cottons.[80] Tanguis germplasm has since been incorporated into breeding programs worldwide, including U.S. Pima improvement in the 1960s via crosses with varieties like Pima S-1 and Sacaton Pima, contributing to hybrid lines with better fiber strength and ginning efficiency.[83] Other hybrids derived from G. barbadense include inter-varietal crosses in Peru and the southwestern U.S., such as those blending Tanguis with Pima for Fusarium resistance, as registered in germplasm lines like PSSJ-FRP01–03 in 2022, which exhibit improved yield and disease tolerance while retaining extra-long staple qualities.[84] Experimental hybrids, like triple crosses involving G. barbadense, G. hirsutum, and wild relatives such as G. arboreum, have been developed to boost ginning percentage and fiber strength, though fertility barriers limit commercial viability.[13] These efforts prioritize empirical selection for agronomic traits over genetic engineering, reflecting ongoing adaptation to regional pests and climates.[7]Cultivation Practices
Agronomic Requirements and Techniques
Gossypium barbadense thrives in tropical and subtropical climates with temperatures ranging from 22–32°C and requires 200–250 frost-free days for maturation.[2][28] Annual rainfall of 750–1250 mm during the growing season supports development, followed by a dry period essential for boll ripening and fiber quality, with low humidity preferred to prevent deterioration.[2] The species is highly sensitive to frost and performs poorly under shading or high humidity post-March in certain regions.[2][28] Suitable soils are well-drained, medium to deep profiles of light to heavy texture with moderate fertility and pH between 5.2 and 8.5.[2] It tolerates moderate salinity but avoids waterlogged or highly acidic conditions, with vertisols like cracking grey clays used in irrigated systems.[2][28] Seedbed preparation ensures soil temperatures of 60–65°F (15–18°C) at planting depth for optimal germination.[85] Planting occurs when soil at 10–14°C persists for several days, typically late March to April in arid regions like Arizona, guided by 300–900 heat units accumulated since January.[85][28] Seeds are sown at 2–3 cm deep in clay soils or 4–5 cm in sandy soils, with fuzzy seeds requiring additional moisture for germination.[2] Row spacings of 50–120 cm accommodate branching, with intra-row distances of 15–60 cm yielding densities of 25,000–40,000 plants per acre for varieties like Pima.[2][85] Thinning to final stands occurs 4–5 weeks post-sowing, often using 20–25 kg/ha of delinted seed at rates of 5 seeds per hill.[2] Irrigation is critical during boll development, with total applications of 2–3.5 acre-feet or approximately 7 ML/ha depending on soil and method, using furrow or drip systems to prevent stress.[85][28] Supplemental water supports early planting or dry spells, but termination 3–4 weeks before defoliation avoids excess moisture during ripening; daily use peaks at 8–10 mm in peak growth.[2][85] Nutrient management targets uptake of 105 kg N, 18 kg P, and 66 kg K per hectare for yields around 1680 kg seed cotton, with half N and all P/K applied at sowing, remainder N at thinning.[2] Pima varieties require 40% lower petiole nitrate levels than upland cotton, monitored to stay below 3000 ppm pre-defoliation, as excess N increases sensitivity to deficiencies and pests.[85][28] Crop rotation with wheat or legumes every third year enhances soil fertility and yield by up to 13%.[28] Harvesting follows boll opening after 25–60 days of ripening in dry conditions, via hand-picking in multiple rounds or mechanical methods with defoliants for uniform maturity.[2]Major Producing Regions
Peru is the primary producing region for Gossypium barbadense, with cultivation concentrated in the northern coastal valleys, particularly Piura, where varieties such as Pima and Tanguis dominate output. This species forms the basis of nearly all Peruvian cotton production, thriving in the arid, irrigated lowlands with long growing seasons. Annual yields contribute significantly to global extra-long staple (ELS) supply, supported by dedicated breeding programs from institutions like the Peruvian Cotton Institute.[86][87] In the United States, G. barbadense is cultivated as Pima cotton primarily in the Southwestern states, with California's San Joaquin Valley accounting for about 90% of domestic production due to its hot, dry climate and advanced irrigation systems. Arizona and Texas contribute smaller shares, focusing on high-quality ELS fibers. U.S. Pima output for the 2023/24 season reached approximately 307,000 bales (480 pounds each), the lowest in 36 years amid challenges like water scarcity, though plantings expanded to 182,000 acres in 2024.[88][89][90] Egypt ranks as a key ELS producer, with G. barbadense varieties like Giza grown extensively in the Nile Delta and Valley regions under flood-irrigated conditions. Over 95% of Egypt's cotton acreage features ELS or long-staple types, yielding around 320,000 bales in the 2025/26 marketing year forecast, though area has declined to 80,000 hectares due to competition from alternative crops. Additional notable regions include Australia (irrigated Murray-Darling Basin), Sudan (Nile-irrigated schemes), and limited areas in China and Uzbekistan, collectively comprising smaller shares of global ELS production estimated at 284,000 metric tonnes for 2023/24.[61][91][89]| Region/Country | Key Areas | Approximate Share/Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Peru | Piura coastal valleys | Dominant global source; ~80% of national cotton as G. barbadense varieties |
| United States | San Joaquin Valley (CA), Arizona | 307,000 bales (2023/24); 90% from CA |
| Egypt | Nile Delta/Valley | 320,000 bales forecast (2025/26); >95% ELS/LS composition |
Pest, Disease, and Weed Management
Gossypium barbadense, including varieties such as Pima cotton, encounters key insect pests like spider mites (Tetranychus urticae) and thrips (Frankliniella spp.), to which it demonstrates higher resistance relative to Gossypium hirsutum.[92] In Egyptian cultivation, the species faces attacks from diverse pests across growth stages, including bollworms and leaf feeders, necessitating vigilant monitoring.[93] Integrated pest management (IPM) strategies emphasize alternating applications of organophosphates and pyrethroids to mitigate resistance development, alongside biological controls like natural predators observed in Barbados fields.[13][94] Seed treatments and early-season scouting further reduce reliance on broad-spectrum insecticides, with substantial reductions in chemical inputs achievable through resistant germplasm.[95] Diseases pose significant threats, particularly Verticillium wilt caused by Verticillium dahliae, where resistant G. barbadense varieties exhibit differential gene expression at 12–48 hours post-inoculation, informing breeding for tolerance.[96] Fusarium wilt (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum race 4) management relies on certified clean seed, deployment of resistant cultivars, field sanitation to lower inoculum, and avoiding susceptible rotations.[97][8] Pima cotton shows tolerance to early-season fungal issues like seedling diseases, aided by crop residue incorporation post-harvest, though no fungicides are registered specifically for cotton in some regions.[98][99] Roguing infected plants weekly and isolating seed production fields from viral sources like leaf curl help curb spread.[13] Weed management is critical, as uncontrolled weeds can reduce yields by up to 45% in cotton systems, with G. barbadense trials in Egypt demonstrating that integrated herbicide programs—combining pre-emergence applications like pendimethalin with post-emergence options such as fluometuron—boost seed cotton yields by 20–30% while preserving fiber quality in varieties like Giza 94.[100][101] Selective pre-emergence herbicides target broadleaf and grass weeds without phytotoxicity, outperforming manual weeding in density control.[102] Inter-row tillage at 2–4 foot spacings suppresses emergence mechanically, complementing chemical controls like Staple (pyrithiobac) for glyphosate-resistant species, though over-reliance on any single mode risks resistance buildup.[103][104] Crop rotation with non-hosts and precise application timing enhance efficacy, minimizing off-target effects on G. barbadense's sensitive growth phases.[105]Genetic Improvement
Traditional Breeding Efforts
Traditional breeding of Gossypium barbadense primarily relied on methods such as mass selection, pedigree selection, and controlled hybridization to enhance fiber quality, yield, and adaptation, beginning with ancient domestication in South America and intensifying in the 19th and 20th centuries through germplasm introductions.[83] Pedigree selection, involving systematic self-pollination and evaluation across generations (e.g., F2 to F4), proved effective for stabilizing traits like boll number, seed cotton yield per plant, and earliness, with high broad-sense heritability estimates (0.96–0.98 for key yield components).[106] These efforts prioritized the species' inherent extra-long staple length (typically 1.3–1.5 inches) and fineness while addressing limitations like lower productivity relative to G. hirsutum.[83] In the United States, Pima cotton breeding originated around 1909 with the introduction of Egyptian 'Ashmouni' varieties to Arizona, establishing the Sacaton (American-Egyptian) gene pool through crosses with Sea Island cotton from St. Kitts.[83] This was followed by additional gene pools: a second pool from interspecific and intraspecific hybrids (Pima, Tanguis, Sea Island, and upland types), yielding 'Pima S-1' in 1951 (upper half mean staple 1.32 inches, uniformity 82%); and a Hybrid B pool in the mid-1960s, leading to 'Pima S-3'.[83] Cumulative selections improved fiber uniformity, strength (e.g., from 9.2 to higher in later releases), and yarn skein strength, culminating in 'Pima S-7' in 1991, which integrated traits across pools for balanced performance.[83] In Egypt, the Cotton Research Institute at Giza employed hybridization followed by pedigree selection to develop staple varieties like Giza 86, Giza 90, Giza 94, and Giza 95, focusing on long-staple (1.25–1.375 inches) maintenance alongside yield gains (e.g., Giza 95 outperforming Giza 90 in seed and lint yields).[107] [108] One or two cycles of selection reduced genotypic variability while preserving fiber properties suitable for semi-arid conditions, though gains in complex traits like yield required multi-generational refinement.[106] These programs demonstrated pedigree method's versatility in producing elite lines adaptable to local environments, informing subsequent hybrid development.[106]Modern Breeding and Genetic Research
Modern breeding efforts for Gossypium barbadense have leveraged genomic resources to enhance fiber quality, yield, and resistance traits, addressing the species' inherently narrow genetic base compared to G. hirsutum. High-quality chromosome-scale genome assemblies, such as the 2019 de novo sequencing of accession 3-79, have enabled comparative analyses revealing subgenomic biases and evolutionary insights into extra-long staple fiber development.[7] These assemblies, spanning approximately 2.5 Gb with contig N50 values exceeding 50 Mb, facilitate identification of structural variants and gene families associated with fiber elongation and specialized metabolites.[109] Subsequent advancements include the 2023 assembly of the Pima-S6 cultivar, yielding a 2.3 Gb reference genome annotated with 88,343 predicted genes, over 75,000 of which show homology to known proteins, aiding dissection of traits like Fusarium wilt resistance (FOV4).[110] A 2025 pangenome analysis across G. barbadense accessions highlighted structural variations contributing to fiber-related diversity, identifying loci for improved yield despite the species' typical lower productivity relative to G. hirsutum.[111] Such resources support marker-assisted selection (MAS) and genomic prediction models to introgress superior alleles, as demonstrated by genome-wide artificial introgressions into G. hirsutum backgrounds, which pinpointed quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for simultaneous fiber length, strength, and fineness gains.[112] Genetic diversity studies, including single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) discovery in Pima germplasm, have quantified low-to-moderate variation within elite lines, prompting strategies to broaden the base via wild Gossypium relatives or interspecific hybrids.[113] For instance, 70% introgression from G. hirsutum into G. barbadense populations has elevated diversity and adaptive divergence, with specific loci linked to yield enhancement through altered photosynthesis and stomatal conductance in yield-bred Pima varieties.[114][115] These efforts prioritize empirical QTL mapping over unverified modeling, emphasizing causal links between introgressed segments and phenotypic outcomes in field trials.Uses and Applications
Textile and Fiber Production
Gossypium barbadense yields extra-long staple (ELS) cotton fibers typically measuring 30–40 mm in length, with some varieties reaching up to 64 mm, enabling the production of finer, stronger yarns compared to shorter-staple cottons like Gossypium hirsutum.[2][9] These fibers exhibit superior fineness, tensile strength, and uniformity, with low short-fiber content, which minimizes breakage during processing and enhances fabric luster and durability.[49][22] In textile production, harvested G. barbadense lint undergoes ginning to separate fibers from seeds, followed by cleaning to remove impurities while preserving fiber length, often requiring hand-harvesting to avoid mechanical damage.[44] The fibers are then carded and combed to align staples and eliminate shorter ones, facilitating combed spinning techniques that produce high-twist yarns suitable for premium textiles.[116][117] Spinning involves drawing the combed fibers into rovings, which are twisted into yarns on ring or open-end machines, leveraging the ELS properties for counts exceeding 50 Ne (Ne = English cotton count) with reduced neps and imperfections.[118][119] These yarns are woven or knitted into fabrics prized for their smoothness, breathability, and resistance to pilling, commonly used in luxury shirtings, bedsheets, and apparel where G. barbadense's elasticity and density outperform G. hirsutum equivalents.[7][120] For instance, the longer fibers allow tighter weaves in percale construction, yielding fabrics with enhanced drape and longevity, as evidenced by their preference in high-end markets despite comprising less than 5% of global cotton output.[121][122] Fabrics produced from Peruvian varieties of G. barbadense (often marketed as Peruvian Pima or extra-long staple cotton from Peru) can be distinguished from those made with shorter-staple cottons through label inspection and sensory evaluation. Labels specifying "100% Pima Cotton", "100% Peruvian Cotton", "100% Algodão Peruano", or "100% Algodão Pima Peruano" indicate the use of these premium fibers; in contrast, generic labels stating only "100% cotton" or "100% algodão" typically denote regular upland cotton (G. hirsutum). Authentic Peruvian Pima cotton fabrics are exceptionally soft and silky-smooth, cool to the touch, with excellent drape, a brilliant shine, and uniform texture free of irregularities, providing a luxurious feel and superior durability compared to coarser fabrics from regular cotton.[70][69][123]Seeds, Oil, and Byproducts
The seeds of Gossypium barbadense constitute a significant byproduct of fiber production, containing 15-20% oil by weight, alongside protein and gossypol, a naturally occurring polyphenolic aldehyde toxic to non-ruminants.[124][125] Seed gossypol levels in G. barbadense can reach up to 3.4 g/kg, exceeding those in many G. hirsutum varieties and necessitating processing to mitigate toxicity for feed or industrial applications.[126][125] Cottonseed oil extracted from G. barbadense seeds via hydraulic or screw pressing features a fatty acid composition dominated by linoleic acid (approximately 50%) and oleic acid (up to 20-25% in select accessions), with refining processes removing gossypol residues to levels below 0.02% for edibility.[127] This refined oil serves in food manufacturing for products like margarine, shortenings, mayonnaise, and fried snacks, providing a stable cooking medium with a smoke point of about 216°C.[128] Industrially, it finds use in soaps, cosmetics, and lubricants due to its emollient properties and linoleic acid content supporting skin barrier function.[127] Defatted cottonseed meal, a primary byproduct after oil extraction, supplies 40-50% protein for ruminant feeds, such as beef cattle supplements, where gossypol toxicity is neutralized by rumen microbes, though limits of 20% inclusion apply to avoid fertility issues in breeding animals.[129][130] Cottonseed hulls, separated during processing, provide low-cost roughage (2-5% protein) for livestock diets, enhancing fiber intake in forage-based systems.[129] Emerging applications include bioplastics and enzyme production from meal, alongside gossypol's exploration as an anticancer agent in pharmaceutical research, though human consumption remains restricted without detoxification.[130]Medicinal and Industrial Uses
Extracts from Gossypium barbadense leaves have demonstrated hypotensive effects in animal models, supporting traditional uses for treating high blood pressure, abdominal cramps, menstrual irregularities, and ovarian pain in regions like Suriname.[131][132] The whole plant is employed in folk medicine for sexually transmitted infections such as syphilis and gonorrhea, as well as colds, gout, diarrhea, and gastrointestinal disorders.[133] Seeds have been used traditionally to alleviate coughs, constipation, gonorrhea, and difficult menstruation, while roots serve as diuretics or abortifacients.[134][1] Gossypol, a polyphenolic compound extracted from the pigment glands of G. barbadense seeds, has been investigated for pharmacological applications including male contraception, antitumor activity, antioxidant effects, and treatment of gynecological disorders, HIV/AIDS, and certain cancers such as ovarian cancer.[135][136][137] Ethyl acetate and chloroform extracts of the plant exhibit hepatoprotective, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant properties, potentially attributable to gossypol and related compounds like gossypin.[138] Beyond textiles, G. barbadense linters—short fibers adhering to seeds—serve as a cellulose source for industrial products including nitrocellulose, cellophane, plastics, and paper manufacturing.[139] These applications leverage the high cellulose content of cotton byproducts, with linters providing a purified raw material for chemical derivatization and nonwoven materials used in filters, explosives, and pharmaceuticals.[140] The premium fiber quality of G. barbadense varieties like Pima cotton extends to these byproducts, enhancing their suitability for high-value cellulose derivatives.[141]Economic Significance
Global Production and Trade Statistics
Global production of Gossypium barbadense, which constitutes extra-long staple (ELS) cotton, represents a minor fraction of total world cotton output, typically approximately 3% or approximately 300,000-430,000 metric tons annually in recent years.[142] In the 2021/22 marketing year, production reached 308,000 metric tons, reflecting its niche status compared to dominant upland varieties like Gossypium hirsutum.[142] Projections for 2022/23 anticipated an increase to around 430,000 metric tons, driven by demand for superior fiber qualities in premium textiles, though output remains constrained by cultivation challenges such as lower yields and higher input costs relative to shorter-staple cottons.[142] Major producing countries include the United States, Peru, Egypt, and China, with the U.S. leading in certified Pima varieties under the Supima designation. U.S. ELS production totaled 307,000 bales (approximately 67,000 metric tons, based on 480-pound bales) in the 2023/24 season, primarily from arid southwestern states like California and Arizona.[143] Peru, a key source of native G. barbadense strains, produced an estimated 16,000 metric tons of cotton in calendar year 2023, with the majority classified as ELS fiber suited for high-end applications.[144] Egypt contributes through Giza varieties, while China's Xinjiang region grows limited quantities for domestic premium markets; aggregate data for these regions underscores G. barbadense's concentration in select agro-climatic zones favoring long fiber development.[89]| Country | Production (2023/24, metric tons, approximate) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States | 67,000 | Primarily Pima; 307,000 bales.[143] |
| Peru | 16,000 | Mostly ELS varieties.[144] |
| Global Total | ~300,000-400,000 | approximately 3% of world cotton; variable by year.[142] |