Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

The role of genetics in mainstreaming the production of new and orphan crops to diversify food systems and support human nutrition

Especially in low‐income nations, new and orphan crops provide important opportunities to improve diet quality and the sustainability of food production, being rich in nutrients, capable of fitting into multiple niches in production systems, and relatively adapted to low‐input conditions. The evolving space for these crops in production systems presents particular genetic improvement requirements that extensive gene pools can accommodate. This paper reviews diverse involved target genes and crop development techniques. These techniques include transgressive methods that involve defining exemplar crop models for effective new and orphan crop improvement pathways. Research on new and orphan crops not only supports the genetic improvement of these crops, but they serve as important models for understanding crop evolutionary processes more broadly, guiding further major crop evolution. The bridging position of orphan crops between new and major crops provides unique opportunities for investigating genetic approaches for de novo domestications and major crop ‘rewildings’.
ThemeTechnical Resources
SubjectPlant breeding techniques and approaches
PublisherNew Phytologist
Publication year2019
RegionsGlobal
LanguagesEnglish
Resource typePublications
Resource linkhttps://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/10.1111/nph.15895?download=true
KeywordsSeed management; Plant breeding; Crop wild relatives, neglected and underutilized species