Publication | Open Access
Genetic diversity is indispensable for plant breeding to improve crops
369
Citations
45
References
2020
Year
Plant GeneticsGeneticsAgricultural EconomicsCrop ImprovementGenetic DiversityCrop EnhancementSustainable AgriculturePublic HealthAgricultural GeneticsMolecular BreedingGenetic VariationAbstract Plant BreedersPlant BreedersPopulation GeneticsPlant BreedingGenetic ResourceCrop ProtectionCrop ScienceGenetic EngineeringMedicineGenome EditingClimate Resilient Crops
Plant breeders confront global challenges to food security and must develop climate‑resilient, high‑yield, and nutritionally improved cultivars by strategically integrating diverse genetic resources while preserving key economic traits. This review aims to provide an industry perspective on incorporating genetic diversity into crop improvement. It illustrates this through real‑life and conceptual examples, discusses the long timelines and strategic challenges, and examines how tools such as genome editing are applied at different breeding stages.
Abstract Plant breeders face multiple global challenges that affect food security, productivity, accessibility, and nutritional quality. One major challenge for plant breeders is developing environmentally resilient crop cultivars in response to rapid shifts in cultivation conditions and resources due to climate change. Plant breeders rely on different crop genetic resources, breeding tools, and methods to incorporate genetic diversity into commercialized cultivars. Breeders use genetic diversity to develop new cultivars with improved agronomics, such as higher yield, biotic and abiotic stress tolerance, and to improve the nutritional quality of foods for a growing world population. Plant breeders perform the essential task of strategic integration of new genetic diversity while preserving important economic traits of individual crops such as relative maturity (maize, Zea mays L.), fruit type (tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.), plant type (lettuce Lactuca sativa L.), and habitat type (canola, Brassica napus L.) that are highly specialized for specific consumer preferences or market needs. This review provides an industry perspective on how genetic diversity is incorporated for crop improvement by (a) using a real‐life example to highlight the vast amount of genetic diversity that exists in plants, (b) providing a conceptual example to illustrate strategic challenges a breeder faces while incorporating diversity, (c) describing how and why it can a decade or more to incorporate diversity into commercialized cultivars, even when advanced tools and technologies are used, and (d) sharing factors that plant breeders consider when applying various tools, including genome editing, at different stages of plant breeding.
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