Title
State of ex situ conservation of landrace groups of 25 major crops
Date Issued
01 May 2022
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Ramirez-Villegas J.
Khoury C.K.
Achicanoy H.A.
Diaz M.V.
Mendez A.C.
Sosa C.C.
Kehel Z.
Guarino L.
Abberton M.
Aunario J.
Awar B.A.
Alarcon J.C.
Amri A.
Anglin N.L.
Azevedo V.
Aziz K.
Capilit G.L.
Chavez O.
Chebotarov D.
Costich D.E.
Debouck D.G.
Ellis D.
Falalou H.
Fiu A.
Ghanem M.E.
Giovannini P.
Goungoulou A.J.
Gueye B.
Hobyb A.I.E.
Jamnadass R.
Jones C.S.
Kpeki B.
Lee J.S.
McNally K.L.
Muchugi A.
Ndjiondjop M.N.
Oyatomi O.
Payne T.S.
Ramachandran S.
Roux N.
Ruas M.
Sansaloni C.
Sardos J.
Setiyono T.D.
Tchamba M.
van den Houwe I.
Velazquez J.A.
Venuprasad R.
Wenzl P.
Yazbek M.
Zavala C.
International Potato Center (CIP)
Publisher(s)
Nature Research
Abstract
Crop landraces have unique local agroecological and societal functions and offer important genetic resources for plant breeding. Recognition of the value of landrace diversity and concern about its erosion on farms have led to sustained efforts to establish ex situ collections worldwide. The degree to which these efforts have succeeded in conserving landraces has not been comprehensively assessed. Here we modelled the potential distributions of eco-geographically distinguishable groups of landraces of 25 cereal, pulse and starchy root/tuber/fruit crops within their geographic regions of diversity. We then analysed the extent to which these landrace groups are represented in genebank collections, using geographic and ecological coverage metrics as a proxy for genetic diversity. We find that ex situ conservation of landrace groups is currently moderately comprehensive on average, with substantial variation among crops; a mean of 63% ± 12.6% of distributions is currently represented in genebanks. Breadfruit, bananas and plantains, lentils, common beans, chickpeas, barley and bread wheat landrace groups are among the most fully represented, whereas the largest conservation gaps persist for pearl millet, yams, finger millet, groundnut, potatoes and peas. Geographic regions prioritized for further collection of landrace groups for ex situ conservation include South Asia, the Mediterranean and West Asia, Mesoamerica, sub-Saharan Africa, the Andean mountains of South America and Central to East Asia. With further progress to fill these gaps, a high degree of representation of landrace group diversity in genebanks is feasible globally, thus fulfilling international targets for their ex situ conservation.
Start page
491
End page
499
Volume
8
Issue
5
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias agrícolas
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85129759688
PubMed ID
Source
Nature Plants
Sponsor(s)
Support was provided by the CGIAR Genebank Platform (J.R.-V., C.K.K., H.A., M.V.D., A.M., C.C.S., Z.K., L.G., M.A., J.A., B.A.A., J.C.A., A.A., N.L.A., V.A., K.A., G.L.C., O.C., D.C., D.E.C., D.G.D., D.E., H.F., A.F., M.E.G., P.G., A.J.G., B.G., A.I.E.H., R.J., C.S.J., B.K., J.-S.L., K.L.M., A.M., M.-N.N., O.O., T.S.P., S.R., G.R., N.R., M.R., C.S., J.S., T.D.S., M.T., I.v.d.H., J.A.V., R.V., P.W., M.Y. and C.Z.) and by grant number 2019-67012-29733/project accession number 1019405 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (C.K.K.).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus