ABSTRACT

Introduction ....................................................................................................................................306 First Cacao Variety in Trinidad .....................................................................................................306 Early Cacao Agriculture in Trinidad and the Caribbean ...............................................................307 Early Germplasm Movement .........................................................................................................308 Cacao Disasters ..............................................................................................................................309 Reports and Description of the ‘1727’ Disaster ............................................................................. 310 Blast Theories ................................................................................................................................ 311

Theological Theory ................................................................................................................... 311 Astronomical Theory ................................................................................................................ 311 Chill Theory .............................................................................................................................. 312 Hurricane Theory ...................................................................................................................... 312 Drought Theory ......................................................................................................................... 312 Borde Hypothesis ...................................................................................................................... 312 Leiter-Harding Hypothesis ....................................................................................................... 313 Disease Theory ......................................................................................................................... 313 Alternative Diseases .................................................................................................................. 313 Dieback Theory ......................................................................................................................... 315

Climatic Conditions in the 1700s ................................................................................................... 315 Cherelle Wilt .................................................................................................................................. 316 Proposed Model ............................................................................................................................. 316 Inuence of the 1725 Disaster on the Cacao Population Structure of Post-1730 Trinidad ............ 317 Summary and Conclusion .............................................................................................................. 318 Acknowledgments .......................................................................................................................... 319 References ...................................................................................................................................... 319

INTRODUCTION

Cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) is an understory tropical tree that originated in the Amazon basin (Van Hall, 1914; Cheesman, 1944; Cuatrecasas, 1964; Toxopeus, 1985; Wood, 1985a; Coe and Coe, 1996; Bartley, 2005). It is grown either in monoculture or in agroforestry systems. The fermented and dried cacao cotyledons (beans) are the raw material of cocoa mass, cocoa liquor, and cocoa butterfat for food and pharmaceutical industries. Global production was approximately 4.3 million tonnes in 2010-2011 (ICCO, 2012), global sales of chocolate confectionery exceeded US$100 billion in November 2011 (Almedia, 2011) and the global chocolate market is estimated to reach US$98.3 billion in 2016 from US$83.2 billion in 2010 (MarketsandMarkets, 2010). Cocoa is a major export of the west African countries of Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Nigeria; the South American countries of Brazil, Ecuador, and Venezuela; and the Asian countries of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea (International Cocoa Organization, 2011). About 40-50 million people rely on cacao for their livelihood (World Cocoa Foundation, 2012). Soria (1970) and Bartley (2005) described the various varieties (germplasm) of cacao. Primary cacao germplasm is currently categorized into 10 populations (Motamayor et al., 2008). The manufacturing sector recognizes three varieties of cacao, that is, Criollo, Forastero, and Trinitario. Forastero cacao is considered bulk cocoa and represents much of the cacao under cultivation. Criollo cacao was probably domesticated in South America, in southwestern Venezuela, and transported into Central America by the indigenous Indians (Motamayor et al., 2002). The palatability of the mucilaginous pulp on the seeds may have led to selection of particular types (Hart et al., 1998; Motamayor et al., 2002; Henderson et al., 2007; Clement et al., 2010). Although the Criollo variety is much sought after for its high quality, it is highly susceptible to several diseases (Lass, 1985). Trinitario cacao represents natural hybrids between Forastero and Criollo, which arose in different countries (Cheesman, 1944; Toxopeus, 1985; Bartley, 2005). Trinitario trees can have beans with ne avor attributes (Cheesman, 1944; Toxopeus, 1985; Wood, 1985a,b). The Trinitario from Trinidad is highly preferred, and its descendants are present in many cacao-producing countries. The Trinitario from Trinidad arose out of a still unexplained “calamity in 1727” (see Bekele, 2003, and Leiter and Harding, 2004, and references therein). This variety also provides a case study of the resilience of natural hybridization and the impact of natural disaster on the spread of cacao worldwide. In this review, we compare all possible relevant facts of the disaster and arrive at a new synthesis.