Introduction to crop wild relatives

Food production has advanced from the original form where humans gathered food from the wild, to cultivation and selection of wild plants (landraces), and further to modern-day plant breeding of new varieties and cultivars with high quality, yields, and resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses. Food crops have been derived from wild plant species (crop wild relatives) from throughout the world and are now cultivated in locations that may be far from their original sources. Here, we provide information and illustrations about where food crops originated and we highlight the important work of the Russian Geneticist Dr. Nikolai Vavilov, who introduced the concept of “centre of origin” for crop plants and encouraged the conservation and use of crop wild relatives for plant improvement. Crop wild relatives (CWR) provide genetic diversity that may not be available in current cultivated varieties. The novel genetic diversity within these wild species may be the building blocks that breeders need to improve productivity and quality of agricultural products. Although CWR are likely to be the key to future crop improvements, as wild species, they may be lost if there are shifts in their native habitats. Ex situ genebank collections (maintained under cultivated conditions) provide an opportunity to conserve and protect crop wild relatives for future generations.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Volk, Gayle M., Khoury, Colin K., Greene, Stephanie, Byrne, Patrick
Format: Book Chapter biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Colorado State University Press 2020-02
Subjects:food security, seguridad alimentaría, sustainability, sostenibilidad, genebanks, banco de genes,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109058
https://colostate.pressbooks.pub/cropwildrelatives/chapter/introduction-to-crop-wild-relatives/
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1090582020-10-16T17:47:33Z Introduction to crop wild relatives Volk, Gayle M. Khoury, Colin K. Greene, Stephanie Byrne, Patrick food security seguridad alimentaría sustainability sostenibilidad genebanks banco de genes Food production has advanced from the original form where humans gathered food from the wild, to cultivation and selection of wild plants (landraces), and further to modern-day plant breeding of new varieties and cultivars with high quality, yields, and resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses. Food crops have been derived from wild plant species (crop wild relatives) from throughout the world and are now cultivated in locations that may be far from their original sources. Here, we provide information and illustrations about where food crops originated and we highlight the important work of the Russian Geneticist Dr. Nikolai Vavilov, who introduced the concept of “centre of origin” for crop plants and encouraged the conservation and use of crop wild relatives for plant improvement. Crop wild relatives (CWR) provide genetic diversity that may not be available in current cultivated varieties. The novel genetic diversity within these wild species may be the building blocks that breeders need to improve productivity and quality of agricultural products. Although CWR are likely to be the key to future crop improvements, as wild species, they may be lost if there are shifts in their native habitats. Ex situ genebank collections (maintained under cultivated conditions) provide an opportunity to conserve and protect crop wild relatives for future generations. 2020-02 2020-08-22T01:47:49Z 2020-08-22T01:47:49Z Book Chapter Volk, G.M; Khoury, C.; Greene, S.; Byrne, P. (2020) Introduction to Crop Wild Relatives. In: Volk GM, Byrne P (Eds.). Crop Wild Relatives and their Use in Plant Breeding. Colorado State University https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109058 https://colostate.pressbooks.pub/cropwildrelatives/chapter/introduction-to-crop-wild-relatives/ en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access Colorado State University Press
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic food security
seguridad alimentaría
sustainability
sostenibilidad
genebanks
banco de genes
food security
seguridad alimentaría
sustainability
sostenibilidad
genebanks
banco de genes
spellingShingle food security
seguridad alimentaría
sustainability
sostenibilidad
genebanks
banco de genes
food security
seguridad alimentaría
sustainability
sostenibilidad
genebanks
banco de genes
Volk, Gayle M.
Khoury, Colin K.
Greene, Stephanie
Byrne, Patrick
Introduction to crop wild relatives
description Food production has advanced from the original form where humans gathered food from the wild, to cultivation and selection of wild plants (landraces), and further to modern-day plant breeding of new varieties and cultivars with high quality, yields, and resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses. Food crops have been derived from wild plant species (crop wild relatives) from throughout the world and are now cultivated in locations that may be far from their original sources. Here, we provide information and illustrations about where food crops originated and we highlight the important work of the Russian Geneticist Dr. Nikolai Vavilov, who introduced the concept of “centre of origin” for crop plants and encouraged the conservation and use of crop wild relatives for plant improvement. Crop wild relatives (CWR) provide genetic diversity that may not be available in current cultivated varieties. The novel genetic diversity within these wild species may be the building blocks that breeders need to improve productivity and quality of agricultural products. Although CWR are likely to be the key to future crop improvements, as wild species, they may be lost if there are shifts in their native habitats. Ex situ genebank collections (maintained under cultivated conditions) provide an opportunity to conserve and protect crop wild relatives for future generations.
format Book Chapter
topic_facet food security
seguridad alimentaría
sustainability
sostenibilidad
genebanks
banco de genes
author Volk, Gayle M.
Khoury, Colin K.
Greene, Stephanie
Byrne, Patrick
author_facet Volk, Gayle M.
Khoury, Colin K.
Greene, Stephanie
Byrne, Patrick
author_sort Volk, Gayle M.
title Introduction to crop wild relatives
title_short Introduction to crop wild relatives
title_full Introduction to crop wild relatives
title_fullStr Introduction to crop wild relatives
title_full_unstemmed Introduction to crop wild relatives
title_sort introduction to crop wild relatives
publisher Colorado State University Press
publishDate 2020-02
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109058
https://colostate.pressbooks.pub/cropwildrelatives/chapter/introduction-to-crop-wild-relatives/
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AT byrnepatrick introductiontocropwildrelatives
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