A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA

The forage genetic resources activities at ILCA located in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, focus on the acquisition, maintenance, characterization, evaluation, and distribution of forage germplasm for development and utilization as livestock feeds. The genetic resources required for forage development are increasingly being eroded, especially in Africa. The ILCA genebank holds more than 12,000 accessions of grasses, legumes, and fodder trees with a wide representation of the major genera identified for potential forage use. The ILCA genebank holds both an active collection for research and distribution of seeds, and a base collection for long-term security storage. This paper discusses characterization and evaluation of the existing collection, research and monitoring activities, lack of information on breeding system which is one of the constraints to the correct management of forage germplasm, and training in genetic resources given to young sientists. The paper also summarises a proposed project - "Indigenous forage genetic resources basis for livestock feed".

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hanson, Jean
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1994
Subjects:feed crops, genetic resources, germplasm conservation, evaluation, breeding systems, animal feeding,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28453
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-284532023-02-15T10:14:49Z A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA Hanson, Jean feed crops genetic resources germplasm conservation evaluation breeding systems animal feeding The forage genetic resources activities at ILCA located in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, focus on the acquisition, maintenance, characterization, evaluation, and distribution of forage germplasm for development and utilization as livestock feeds. The genetic resources required for forage development are increasingly being eroded, especially in Africa. The ILCA genebank holds more than 12,000 accessions of grasses, legumes, and fodder trees with a wide representation of the major genera identified for potential forage use. The ILCA genebank holds both an active collection for research and distribution of seeds, and a base collection for long-term security storage. This paper discusses characterization and evaluation of the existing collection, research and monitoring activities, lack of information on breeding system which is one of the constraints to the correct management of forage germplasm, and training in genetic resources given to young sientists. The paper also summarises a proposed project - "Indigenous forage genetic resources basis for livestock feed". 1994 2013-05-06T07:00:38Z 2013-05-06T07:00:38Z Journal Article Diversity;9(4) & 10(1): 43-45 0744-8163 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28453 en Limited Access p. 43-45 Diversity
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 feed crops
genetic resources
germplasm conservation
evaluation
breeding systems
animal feeding
feed crops
genetic resources
germplasm conservation
evaluation
breeding systems
animal feeding
spellingShingle feed crops
genetic resources
germplasm conservation
evaluation
breeding systems
animal feeding
feed crops
genetic resources
germplasm conservation
evaluation
breeding systems
animal feeding
Hanson, Jean
A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA
description The forage genetic resources activities at ILCA located in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, focus on the acquisition, maintenance, characterization, evaluation, and distribution of forage germplasm for development and utilization as livestock feeds. The genetic resources required for forage development are increasingly being eroded, especially in Africa. The ILCA genebank holds more than 12,000 accessions of grasses, legumes, and fodder trees with a wide representation of the major genera identified for potential forage use. The ILCA genebank holds both an active collection for research and distribution of seeds, and a base collection for long-term security storage. This paper discusses characterization and evaluation of the existing collection, research and monitoring activities, lack of information on breeding system which is one of the constraints to the correct management of forage germplasm, and training in genetic resources given to young sientists. The paper also summarises a proposed project - "Indigenous forage genetic resources basis for livestock feed".
format Journal Article
topic_facet feed crops
genetic resources
germplasm conservation
evaluation
breeding systems
animal feeding
author Hanson, Jean
author_facet Hanson, Jean
author_sort Hanson, Jean
title A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA
title_short A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA
title_full A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA
title_fullStr A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA
title_full_unstemmed A rich trove of sub-Saharan Africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ILCA
title_sort rich trove of sub-saharan africa's forage genetic resources conserved at ilca
publishDate 1994
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28453
work_keys_str_mv AT hansonjean arichtroveofsubsaharanafricasforagegeneticresourcesconservedatilca
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