Past and Future Use of Wild Relatives in Crop Breeding
University of British Columbia · United Nations University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Wild species related to agricultural crops (crop wild relatives, or CWR) can increase the adaptive capacity of agricultural systems around the world. They represent a large pool of genetic diversity from which to draw new allelic variation required in breeding programs. Crop wild relatives have been extremely valuable in adapting crop varieties to changing disease pressures, farming practices, market demands, and climatic conditions. Unfortunately, CWR are a threatened resource and measures need to be taken to protect them, both in the wild and in genebanks. Here, we review how wild species have contributed to the development of improved crop varieties and where efforts must be concentrated to harness their…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 91.17
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 102
Authors
6- HDHannes DempewolfCorresponding
University of British Columbia, United Nations University, Global Crop Diversity Trust
- GJGregory J. Baute
University of British Columbia
- JAJustin Anderson
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
- BKBenjamin Kilian
United Nations University, Global Crop Diversity Trust
- CSChelsea Smith
University of Waterloo
Topics & keywords
- Crop
- Agriculture
- Crop diversity
- Biology
- Threatened species
- Genetic resources
- Agroforestry
- Resource (disambiguation)