Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

Our shared global responsibility: Safeguarding crop diversity for future generations

The resilience and sustainability of food systems depend on crop diversity. It is used by breeders to produce new and better varieties, and by farmers to respond to new challenges or demands and to spread risk. However, crop diversity can only be used if it has been conserved, can be identified as the solution for a given problem, and is available. As the ways in which crop diversity is used in research and breeding change and expand, the global conservation system for crop diversity must keep pace; it must provide not only the biological materials themselves, but also the relevant information presented in a comprehensive and coherent way—all while ensuring equitable access and benefit sharing. Here the authors explore the evolving priorities for global efforts to safeguard and make available the diversity of the world's crops through ex situ genetic resource collections. They suggest that collections held by academic institutions and other holders that are not standard gene banks should be better integrated in global efforts and decision-making to conserve genetic resources. The authors conclude with key actions that we suggest should be taken to ensure that crop diversity collections of all types are able to fulfill their role to foster more diverse, equitable, resilient, and sustainable food systems globally.
ThemeTechnical Resources
SubjectCrop diversity
PublisherPNAS
Publication year2023
RegionsGlobal
LanguagesEnglish
Resource typePublications
Resource linkhttps://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2205768119
KeywordsAgricultural biodiversity; Crop wild relatives, neglected and underutilized species; Food system; Plant breeding