using crop wild relatives

17
Adapting agriculture to climate change: collecting, protecting and preparing crop wild relatives Luigi Guarino & Hannes Dempewolf - The Global Crop Diversity Trust -

Upload: luigi-guarino

Post on 07-May-2015

1.279 views

Category:

Technology


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Talk at EWAC workshop 2011

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Using crop wild relatives

Adapting agriculture to climatechange: collecting, protecting and

preparing crop wild relatives

Luigi Guarino & Hannes Dempewolf- The Global Crop Diversity Trust -

Page 2: Using crop wild relatives

What is the Global Crop Diversity Trust?

• Public-private partnership raising an endowment fund that will provide continuous funding for key crop collections (starting with CG collections)

• Goal: “to advance an efficient and sustainable global system of ex situ conservation by promoting the rescue, understanding, use and long-term conservation of valuable plant genetic resources”

• Part of the funding strategy of the International Treaty for Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA)

Page 3: Using crop wild relatives

GENESYS

http://www.genesys-pgr.org/

Page 4: Using crop wild relatives

Svalbard Global Seed Vault

Page 5: Using crop wild relatives

The Trust’s initiative on crop wild relatives

• The 26 focal crops of this project are: alfalfa, apple, bambara groundnut, banana, barley, bean, carrot, chickpea, cowpea, eggplant, faba bean, finger millet, grasspea, lentil, oat, pea, pearl millet, pigeon pea, potato, rice, rye, sorghum, sunflower, sweet potato, vetch and wheat

• Focus of gap analysis: • barley: 2 CWR taxa• oat: 12 CWR taxa• rye: 4 CWR taxa• wheat: 55 CWR taxa

Page 6: Using crop wild relatives

The Trust’s initiative on crop wild relatives

• The 26 focal crops of this project are: alfalfa, apple, bambara groundnut, banana, barley, bean, carrot, chickpea, cowpea, eggplant, faba bean, finger millet, grasspea, lentil, oat, pea, pearl millet, pigeon pea, potato, rice, rye, sorghum, sunflower, sweet potato, vetch and wheat

• Focus of priority setting: • barley: 2 CWR taxa• oat: 12 CWR taxa• rye: 4 CWR taxa• wheat: 55 CWR taxa

Page 7: Using crop wild relatives

Targeting “missing” diversity

http://gisweb.ciat.cgiar.org/GapAnalysis/

Page 8: Using crop wild relatives

Targeting threatened diversity

Page 9: Using crop wild relatives

Pre-breeding

“It's a bit like crossing a house cat with a wildcat. You don't automatically get a big docile pussycat. What you get is a lot of

wildness that you probably don't want Iying on your sofa.”

Page 10: Using crop wild relatives

Other (better?) alternatives

• First evaluation, then pre-breeding• QTL (and MAS) approach• Sequence-based transcriptomics• Candidate gene approach

…. ?

Page 11: Using crop wild relatives

Survey of pre-breeding experts

1. Which wild species or population(s) of crop wild relatives do you think should be targeted first and foremost?

2. Which wild species or population(s) do you feel are currently under-represented in ex situ collections and should be targeted during the collecting activities of this project?

3. Which traits would you target (especially with reference to traits that are important in a climate change context)?

So far a total of 79 expert responses were collected 22 responses for wheat, but only few for barley, oat and rye

Page 12: Using crop wild relatives

Survey results for wheat

1. Which wild species or population(s) of crop wild relatives do you think should be targeted first and foremost?

Summary: • Aegilops tauschii and rye (Secale cereale) likely the species that will make

the most, immediate impact on wheat improvement over the next 2 decades.

• The genus Dasypyrum• The entire genus Secale, because most members of that genus have

been domesticated and thus would present significantly less linkage drag when incorporated into wheat…

• wheat diploid and tetraploid relatives – T. speltoides, T. uratu, T. dicoccoides

• Genus: Thinopyrum• South American Hordeum species

Page 13: Using crop wild relatives

Survey results for wheat

2. Which wild species or population(s) do you feel are currently under represented in ex situ collections and should be targeted during the collecting activities of this project?

Summary: • Aegilops tauschii and Aegilops speltoides (from Iran)• Genus Dasypyrum• Triticum speltoides and Triticum tauschii• Low ploidy species in Thinopyrum genus• All wild Triticum/Aegilops spp. and Amblyopyrum muticum• Triticum urartu in Iran• South American Hordeum species• The former Agropyron species (Thinoprum ponticum, Thinopyrum

intermedium) and their progenitors (Pseudorogneria species, Th. bessarabicum)

• Triticum dicoccoides, Triticum aestivum var spelta, and the monococcums

Page 14: Using crop wild relatives

Survey results for wheat

3. Which traits would you target (especially with reference to traits that are important in a climate change context)?

Summary: • Heat tolerance (particularly to high night temperatures); root architecture; soil borne

pathogens; tolerance or efficiency to micronutrient deficiency and toxicity; phosphorus and nitrogen use efficiency; water use efficiency; new sources of dwarfing genes; wheat blast resistance; insect pest resistances.

• Various forms of abiotic stress including drought stress, heat stress, winter hardiness, aluminum tolerance, boron deficiency tolerance, and water use efficiency.

• Phenology traits (photoperiod, vernalization, earliness per se, flowering)• Earliness in flowering• Perenniallity• Any traits (biochemical, physical) that confer tolerance to extreme temperatures and

low soil moisture.• Photosynthesis and dark respiration data in cereal leaves.• Salt stress• Root characters, which have been neglected for 100 years.

Page 15: Using crop wild relatives

Other points to discuss

• Wheat re-synthesis approach• Focus on Dasypyrum for wheat pre-breeding• Advice on oat, rye and barley pre-breeding needed!

Page 16: Using crop wild relatives

Please consider completing the survey…

… if you haven’t done so already.

Survey: http://goo.gl/08MX1

Or email: [email protected]

Page 17: Using crop wild relatives

Thank you for your attention!