Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

Genebank genomics bridges the gap between the conservation of crop diversity and plant breeding

Genebanks have the long-term mission of preserving plant genetic resources as an agricultural legacy for future crop improvement. Operating procedures for seed storage and plant propagation have been in place for decades, but there is a lack of effective means for the discovery and transfer of beneficial alleles from landraces and wild relatives into modern varieties. This study reviews the prospects of using molecular passport data derived from genomic sequence information as a universal monitoring tool at the single-plant level within and between genebanks. Together with recent advances in breeding methodologies, the transformation of genebanks into bio-digital resource centers will facilitate the selection of useful genetic variation and its use in breeding programs, thus providing easy access to past crop diversity. The paper proposes linking catalogs of natural genetic variation and enquiries into biological mechanisms of plant performance as a long-term joint research goal of genebanks, plant geneticists and breeders.
ThemeTechnical Resources
SubjectSeed system
PublisherNature Genetics
Publication year2019
RegionsGlobal
LanguagesEnglish
Resource typePublications
Resource linkhttps://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-019-0443-6
KeywordsRole of genebanks; Agricultural biodiversity; Catalogues and registries; Crop wild relatives, neglected and underutilized species