Mindy M Syfert1, Nora P Castañeda-Álvarez2, Colin K Khoury3, Tiina Särkinen4, Chrystian C Sosa5, Harold A Achicanoy5, Vivian Bernau5, Jaime Prohens6, Marie-Christine Daunay7, Sandra Knapp1. 1. Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD, UK s.knapp@nhm.ac.uk m.syfert@nhm.ac.uk. 2. International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Km 17 Recta Cali-Palmira, Cali, Colombia School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK. 3. International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Km 17 Recta Cali-Palmira, Cali, Colombia Centre for Crop Systems Analysis, Wageningen University, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands. 4. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh EH3 5LR, UK. 5. International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Km 17 Recta Cali-Palmira, Cali, Colombia. 6. Instituto de Conservación y Mejora de la Agrodiversidad Valenciana, Universitat Politècnica de València, Valencia, Spain. 7. INRA, Unité de Genetique & Amélioration des Fruits et Legumes, UR 1052, Domaine St. Maurice, CS 60094 F-84143, Montfavet cedex, France.
Abstract
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Crop wild relatives (CWR) provide important traits for plant breeding, including pest, pathogen, and abiotic stress resistance. Therefore, their conservation and future availability are essential for food security. Despite this need, the world's genebanks are currently thought to conserve only a small fraction of the total diversity of CWR. METHODS: We define the eggplant genepool using the results of recent taxonomic and phylogenetic studies. We identify the gaps in germplasm accessions for eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) CWR by comparing georeferenced herbarium records and germplasm accessions using a gap analysis methodology implementing species distribution models (SDM). Preliminary conservation assessments using IUCN criteria were done for all species and were combined with the gap analysis to pinpoint where under-collected and threatened CWR species coincide with high human disturbance and occur outside of protected areas. KEY RESULTS: We show that many eggplant CWR are poorly represented in genebanks compared to their native ranges. Priority areas for future collecting are concentrated in Africa, especially along the Kenya-Tanzania border. Fourteen species of eggplant CWR are assessed as threatened or near-threatened; these are also concentrated in eastern Africa. CONCLUSIONS: The knowledge base upon which conservation of wild relative germplasm depends must take into account both taxonomic and phylogenetic advances. Beyond traditional research focus on close relatives of crops, we emphasize the benefits of defining a broad CWR genepool, and the importance of assessing threats to wild species when targeting localities for future collection of CWR to improve crop breeding in the face of environmental change.
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Crop wild relatives (CWR) provide important traits for plant breeding, including pest, pathogen, and abiotic stress resistance. Therefore, their conservation and future availability are essential for food security. Despite this need, the world's genebanks are currently thought to conserve only a small fraction of the total diversity of CWR. METHODS: We define the eggplant genepool using the results of recent taxonomic and phylogenetic studies. We identify the gaps in germplasm accessions for eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) CWR by comparing georeferenced herbarium records and germplasm accessions using a gap analysis methodology implementing species distribution models (SDM). Preliminary conservation assessments using IUCN criteria were done for all species and were combined with the gap analysis to pinpoint where under-collected and threatened CWR species coincide with high human disturbance and occur outside of protected areas. KEY RESULTS: We show that many eggplant CWR are poorly represented in genebanks compared to their native ranges. Priority areas for future collecting are concentrated in Africa, especially along the Kenya-Tanzania border. Fourteen species of eggplant CWR are assessed as threatened or near-threatened; these are also concentrated in eastern Africa. CONCLUSIONS: The knowledge base upon which conservation of wild relative germplasm depends must take into account both taxonomic and phylogenetic advances. Beyond traditional research focus on close relatives of crops, we emphasize the benefits of defining a broad CWR genepool, and the importance of assessing threats to wild species when targeting localities for future collection of CWR to improve crop breeding in the face of environmental change.
Keywords:
Red List assessments; Solanaceae; Solanum; agriculture; crop genepools; eggplant; food security; gap analysis; genebanks; species distribution modeling
Authors: Lorenzo Barchi; Alberto Acquadro; David Alonso; Giuseppe Aprea; Laura Bassolino; Olivia Demurtas; Paola Ferrante; Pietro Gramazio; Paola Mini; Ezio Portis; Davide Scaglione; Laura Toppino; Santiago Vilanova; María José Díez; Giuseppe Leonardo Rotino; Sergio Lanteri; Jaime Prohens; Giovanni Giuliano Journal: Front Plant Sci Date: 2019-08-07 Impact factor: 5.753
Authors: Edgar García-Fortea; Agustín Lluch-Ruiz; Benito José Pineda-Chaza; Ana García-Pérez; Juan Pablo Bracho-Gil; Mariola Plazas; Pietro Gramazio; Santiago Vilanova; Vicente Moreno; Jaime Prohens Journal: BMC Plant Biol Date: 2020-01-06 Impact factor: 4.215