Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

Genetic diversity and selection signatures in maize landraces compared across 50 years of in situ and ex situ conservation

Genomics-based, longitudinal comparisons between ex situ and in situ agrobiodiversity conservation strategies can contribute to a better understanding of their underlying effects. However, landrace designations, ambiguous common names, and gaps in sampling information complicate the identification of matching ex situ and in situ seed lots. Here the authors report a 50-year longitudinal comparison of the genetic diversity of a set of 13 accessions from the state of Morelos, Mexico, conserved ex situ since 1967 and retrieved in situ from the same donor families in 2017. Results have implications for ex situ collection resampling strategies and the in situ conservation of threatened landraces.
ThemeTechnical Resources
SubjectCrop diversity
PublisherHeredity
Publication year2021
RegionsLatin America and the Caribbean
LanguagesEnglish
Resource typePublications
Resource linkhttps://repository.cimmyt.org/bitstream/handle/10883/21354/63599.pdf?sequence=3
KeywordsPlant breeding; Agricultural biodiversity; Role of genebanks; Best practices approaches and techniques