In situ conservation — harnessing natural and human‐derived evolutionary forces to ensure future crop adaptation
Ensuring the availability of the broadest possible germplasm base for agriculture in the face of increasingly uncertain and variable patterns of biotic and abiotic change is fundamental for the world's future food supply. While ex situ conservation plays a major role in the conservation and availability of crop germplasm, it may be insufficient to ensure this. In situ conservation aims to maintain target species and the collective genotypes they represent under evolution. This study reviews evidence regarding the likelihood and rate of evolutionary change in both biotic and abiotic traits for crops and their wild relatives, placing these processes in a realistic context in which smallholder farming operates and crop wild relatives continue to exist. It identifies areas of research that would contribute to a deeper understanding of these processes as the basis for making them more useful for future crop adaptation.
Theme | Technical Resources |
Subject | Farming Systems |
Publisher | Evolutionary Applications |
Publication year | 2017 |
Regions | Global |
Languages | English |
Resource type | Publications |
Resource link | https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/10.1111/eva.12521?download=true |
Keywords | Crop wild relatives, neglected and underutilized species; Recognition of the role of farmers; Plant breeding; Agricultural biodiversity |
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