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Traditional breeding: major challenges and potentials

Traditional breeding: major challenges and potentials. Bert Visser Copenhagen, 13 december 2005. Scope of this presentation (1). challenges reaching the rural poor decreasing malnutrition accepting limits to land use absorbing increased meat consumption coping with water scarcity

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Traditional breeding: major challenges and potentials

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  1. Traditional breeding:major challenges and potentials Bert Visser Copenhagen, 13 december 2005

  2. Scope of this presentation (1) • challenges • reaching the rural poor • decreasing malnutrition • accepting limits to land use • absorbing increased meat consumption • coping with water scarcity • maintaining genetic diversity • dealing with power relations

  3. Scope of this presentation (2) • potentials • focusing on rural poor • harnessing modern technologies • facilitating access to modern technologies and breeding materials • exploiting genetic resources • involving farmers through participatory breeding • including organic production and low-external-input agriculture

  4. Challenges

  5. Decreasing malnutrition • 800 million people undernourished (Borlaug and Dowswell, 2003) • half of them live on marginal lands and depend on agriculture • population undernourished • 33% in Sub-Saharan Africa • 16% in Asia/Pacific • 10% in Latin America • total calories and composition of the diet both relevant

  6. Meat consumption and water scarcity • increase in meat demand will drive world cereal demand • 40 – 50% in next three decades • irrigated agriculture consumes 70% of global water withdrawal • 40% of global food production from irrigated lands • 60% of global cereal production from irrigated lands

  7. Increasing food production • three ways • expanding land area • increasing cropping frequency • raising crop yields • limited options for area expansion • 85% of production must come from existing agricultural lands (Borlaug and Dowswell, 2003)

  8. Genetic erosion • Genetic erosion ongoing • on-farm through variety replacement and globalization • in situ through habitat destruction • ex situ through poor genebank management and under-funding

  9. Inequalities • access to technologies and breeding materials increasingly limited • poverty • government regulations • intellectual property rights • inequalities at different levels • between states and regions (international level) • between population groups (national level)

  10. Potentials

  11. strategic breeding choices (1) • crops with shorter growth cycles • from one to two/two to three crops/year • also increased multiple cropping, shortened fallow period • changes in plant architecture (ideotype breeding) • more erect stature • reduction in tiller number • increase in grains per panicle • stiffer straw (Kush, 2003)

  12. strategic breeding choices (2) • direct seeding of rice • high potential yield increases (20 – 25%) • higher water use efficiency • water management and genetic adaptations • lower external input needs • reaching the rural poor • more efficient mineral use

  13. strategic breeding choices (3) • focus on Sub-Saharan Africa • no impact of Green Revolution • specific crops, specific conditions • focus on breeding in underutilized and neglected crops • vitamin A-deficiency may be corrected through Golden Rice, or • vitamin A-deficiency might be combatted through improved diet including affordable vegetables and fruits

  14. Harnessing modern technologies (1) • genomics (X-omics) of model species • Arabidopsis thaliana as a general reference • rice for monocots, cotton for fibre crops, tomato for berry-bearing crops • bio-informatics • cereal sequence information rate growth 6X overall growth (Bowers, 2003) • exploitation of DNA sequence information to accelerate breeding

  15. Harnessing modern technologies (2) • wide crosses • advanced backcrossing using wild relatives (Tanksley, 2003) • breeding with quantitative trait loci • marker-assisted breeding/selection (Tuberosa et al., 2003) • preceding fine understanding of individual gene contributions • accelerating breeding in wheat and barley with 5 – 7 years

  16. Exploiting genetic resources • from: genebanks as a source of resistance traits • number one from CGN user questionnaire • to: genebanks as a source for all relevant traits • for 30% of QTLs for any trait wild relatives allele superior • Oryza rufipogon genes may increase rice yields with 18% • thus: wild relatives extremely useful • diversity in domesticates relatively better exploited

  17. Enhancing participatory breeding • complementing strengths of breeders and farmers • various forms, larger outreach (Sperling, 2002) • depends on mutual full acceptance (culture change) • removing regulatory barriers to farmers’ varieties • many modern farmers’ varieties based on introgression from commercial varieties (Visser, 2005/2006)

  18. Adapting to low-external-input agriculture • increasing efficiency of water and fertiliser use • QTL breeding • improving resistances • pyramiding • ‘horizontal’ next to gene-for gene resistances • spin-offs for organic agriculture • ‘voluntary’ low-external input agriculture (Lammerts van Bueren et al., 2005)

  19. Conclusions (1) • many modern technologies instrumental in traditional breeding • huge improvement of breeding process • many unutilized options to respond to challenges using non-GM technology • wider application of such options needed • training of breeders and farmers essential • access to technology crucial • pivotal role IPR-holders; humanitarian licenses

  20. Conclusions (2) • realization of potentials depends on training and sharing technology and (intermediate) products • possible for traditional breeding, unlikely for GM technology • plant breeder’s rights less rigid than patents

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