4.7 Review

Importance of Landraces in Cereal Breeding for Stress Tolerance

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10071267

Keywords

landraces; cereal crops; genetic resource conservation; abiotic and biotic stresses; breeding

Categories

Funding

  1. project CerealMed-Enhancing diversity in Mediterranean cereal farming systems - PRIMA Section 2-Multi-topic 2019
  2. MUR (Ministero dell'Universita e della Ricerca)
  3. Italian Ministry of Agriculture (MiPAAF) [25807]

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The renewed focus on cereal landraces is a response to the reduction of genetic diversity caused by modern agriculture and conventional breeding. These landraces are still cultivated on marginal lands and play an important role in modern plant breeding. On-farm and ex situ conservation in gene bank collections, together with data sharing, greatly benefit cereal improvement.
The renewed focus on cereal landraces is a response to some negative consequences of modern agriculture and conventional breeding which led to a reduction of genetic diversity. Cereal landraces are still cultivated on marginal lands due to their adaptability to unfavourable conditions, constituting an important source of genetic diversity usable in modern plant breeding to improve the adaptation to abiotic or biotic stresses, yield performance and quality traits in limiting environments. Traditional agricultural production systems have played an important role in the evolution and conservation of wide variability in gene pools within species. Today, on-farm and ex situ conservation in gene bank collections, together with data sharing among researchers and breeders, will greatly benefit cereal improvement. Many efforts are usually made to collect, organize and phenotypically and genotypically analyse cereal landrace collections, which also utilize genomic approaches. Their use in breeding programs based on genomic selection, and the discovery of beneficial untapped QTL/genes/alleles which could be introgressed into modern varieties by MAS, pyramiding or biotechnological tools, increase the potential for their better deployment and exploitation in breeding for a more sustainable agricultural production, particularly enhancing adaptation and productivity in stress-prone environments to cope with current climate changes.

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