| Literature DB >> 30956692 |
Edith T Lammerts van Bueren1,2, Paul C Struik3, Nick van Eekeren1, Edwin Nuijten1.
Abstract
How the growing world population can feed itself is a crucial, multi-dimensional problem that goes beyond sustainable development. Crop production will be affected by many changes in its climatic, agronomic, economic, and societal contexts. Therefore, breeders are challenged to produce cultivars that strengthen both ecological and societal resilience by striving for six international sustainability targets: food security, safety and quality; food and seed sovereignty; social justice; agrobiodiversity; ecosystem services; and climate robustness. Against this background, we review the state of the art in plant breeding by distinguishing four paradigmatic orientations that currently co-exist: community-based breeding, ecosystem-based breeding, trait-based breeding, and corporate-based breeding, analyzing differences among these orientations. Our main findings are: (1) all four orientations have significant value but none alone will achieve all six sustainability targets; (2) therefore, an overarching approach is needed: "systems-based breeding," an orientation with the potential to synergize the strengths of the ways of thinking in the current paradigmatic orientations; (3) achieving that requires specific knowledge development and integration, a multitude of suitable breeding strategies and tools, and entrepreneurship, but also a change in attitude based on corporate responsibility, circular economy and true-cost accounting, and fair and green policies. We conclude that systems-based breeding can create strong interactions between all system components. While seeds are part of the common good and the basis of agrobiodiversity, a diversity in breeding approaches, based on different entrepreneurial approaches, can also be considered part of the required agrobiodiversity. To enable systems-based breeding to play a major role in creating sustainable agriculture, a shared sense of urgency is needed to realize the required changes in breeding approaches, institutions, regulations and protocols. Based on this concept of systems-based breeding, there are opportunities for breeders to play an active role in the development of an ecologically and societally resilient, sustainable agriculture.Entities:
Keywords: Agrobiodiversity; Breeding strategies; Common good; Ecological resilience; Entrepreneurial models; Resource use efficiency; Seed systems; Social justice; Societal resilience; Sustainability
Year: 2018 PMID: 30956692 PMCID: PMC6417397 DOI: 10.1007/s13593-018-0522-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Agron Sustain Dev ISSN: 1773-0155 Impact factor: 5.832
Fig. 1Ecological resilience in rice. The figure shows different types of phenotypic plasticity in response to water-deficit stress during the vegetative stage. Variety 1 shows a root system with a short root length under water deficit compared to the control, Variety 2 shows a longer root system under water deficit compared to the control, whereas Variety 3 shows equally long root systems for the water-deficit treatment and the control. Material and data from an experiment described by Kadam et al. (2017). Reproduced with kind permission from Dr. Niteen N. Kadam, International Rice Research Institute and Wageningen University & Research
Fig. 2Societal resilience of rice. Chinese female farmers rank the quality of rice prepared from different cultivars based on their culturally determined preferences and allocating a certain number of maize kernels to indicate the rank of preference. Rice cultivars play an important role in local food and seed sovereignty. Picture by Edith T. Lammerts van Bueren
Fig. 3Roles and positioning of the breeding and seed systems within their technical, economic, institutional and cultural context
Fig. 4Four breeding orientations as functions of different positions between subjectivism and objectivism, and between holism and reductionism
Overview of key characteristics of four breeding orientations
| Orientation | Characteristic | Community-based | Ecosystem-based | Trait-based | Corporate-based |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Institutional philosophy | Worldview | Holocentric | Ecocentric | Technocentric | Egocentric |
| Style of thought | • Respecting cultural and ecological diversity | • Focus on varieties that fit particular ecosystems aiming at improved predictability looking for general patterns | • Focus on technical innovations and regulations | • Focus on business and market development | |
| Knowledge required | • Integration of natural and social sciences, transdisciplinary | • Interdisciplinary, ecological, scientific knowledge | • Specialized, technical science oriented knowledge | • Specialized, strategic and practical knowledge | |
| Socio-economic aspects | Organization of breeding | Local, farmer-led, collaborative, multi-actor approach | Can be centralized, regional; with generalists; can include scientist-led participatory approaches | Centralized; with specialists; top-down | Centralized; with specialists; goal driven and top down |
| Type of economy | Local economy serving local community benefits and appreciation (food and seed sovereignty) | Circular economy to reduce externalities for long-term sustainability and ecological resilience | Linear economy, specialisms, ability to engineer plants, predictability driven | Linear economy based on maximizing input-output balances; economies of scale drive mergers to guarantee economic growth | |
| Breeding technology | Breeding strategy in terms of adaptation | Adaptation to local ecology, culture and market; preferably with durable, quantitative stress resistance | Ecologically and climate robust and regionally adapted; preferably with durable, quantitative stress resistance | Wide adaptation to specific stresses, e.g., “climate-ready genes”; major genes; major QTLs, qualitative resistances | Adapted to anonymous markets; looking for small G × E; qualitative resistance |
| Main selection environment | Field, on-farm, market, community | Field/agro-ecosystem | Laboratory, field | Field, laboratory, computer, market | |
| Cultivar type | Open-pollinated cultivars, modern landraces, heterogeneous population breeding (composite cross populations); concern for cultural and genetic diversity, and agrobiodiversity | Both F1-hybrids and open-pollinated cultivars; research strives for robust/flexible cultivars with improved below-ground traits to enhance resilience, such as strong interactions with beneficial soil microorganisms and improved root characteristics; synthetic varieties | F1-hybrids and pure lines, well-defined cultivars; F1-hybrids based on (cytoplasmic) male sterility, genetic modification, New Breeding Techniques; managing diversity in genes over time (resistance management) | F1-hybrids and pure lines, well-defined varieties; F1-hybrids based on (cytoplasmic) male sterility, genetic modification and New Breeding Techniques; no concern about possible decrease in crop or genetic diversity | |
| Legal aspects and risk management | Intellectual property protection | Biological open-source approach, sharing; transparency; protecting farmers’ rights; respecting common pool resources; respecting seed and food sovereignty | Breeders’ rights with breeders’ exemption for open access to genetic resources to keep genetic base as broad as possible | Focus on breeders’ rights and patents; focus on good descriptions, definitions in contracts | Excluding, closed knowledge system: strong urge to protect investments with technologies and patents; reducing farmers’ rights to farm-saved seeds |
| Risk management | Risk spreading and sharing by communities by partnering and by diversification in technologies (e.g., crop diversity and within-crop diversity); appreciating diversity of solutions | Reducing risks and trade-offs by enhancing ecological robustness and buffering capacity of cultivars; searching for intrinsic solutions | Reducing risks by optimizing efficiency and speed in breeding, and relying on various extrinsic solutions (e.g., clear regulations and chemical crop protectants) in case of trade-offs | Reducing risks by continuously putting new cultivars on the market in combination with use of chemical crop protectants, and avoiding any risks and claims by clear contracts in relation to royalties | |
| Use of crop protection | Refraining as much as possible from chemical crop protection as health of soil, plant, animal, human and planet are indivisible | Minimize chemical use to protect ecosystem resilience and search for solutions that can reduce production risks | Utilizing chemical crop protection when innovations come short to reduce risk and increase production efficiency | Including chemical crop protection to boost production; joint ventures between breeding and chemical industry |
Strengths and potential weaknesses of the four breeding orientations
| Community-based breeding | Ecosystem-based breeding | Trait-based breeding | Corporate-based breeding | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strengths | • Integrative approach | • Ecological-systematic approach | • Analytical-systematic approach | • Entrepreneurial |
| Potential weaknesses | • Too small scale to ensure continuity | • Difficult to connect to currently dominant business model | • Not always in connection with pluriformity in society | • Too much driven by short term profit and the market |
Key elements and aims of the systems-based breeding orientation
| Key elements | Aims | |
|---|---|---|
| Required change in attitude | Corporate social responsibility | Including ethical and social responsibilities beyond legal and economic responsibilities |
| Circular economy and true-cost accounting | Rearranging linear relationships such that value chains become value networks in which various actors work together | |
| Fair and green policies | Creating a frame work for optimal integration of all components of systems-based breeding | |
| From attitude to action | Knowledge development and integration | Supporting continuous development of specialized, generalized and integrated knowledge at various levels (socio-economic, agro-ecological, etc.) |
| Breeding strategies and tools | Designing a range of different appropriate technical breeding approaches | |
| Entrepreneurship | Developing sound entrepreneurial models suitable for various small and large value chains | |
| From action to achievement | Food security, safety, and quality | Enhancing breeding of food that is healthy, nutritious and safe, with high and stable yield, and good shelf-life that does not require chemicals during production and storage |
| Food and seed sovereignty | Allowing a pluriformity of breeding models to co-exist and for communities and markets to choose breeding models that fit best, implicitly serving cultural diversity and seeds as common good | |
| Social justice | Fair and just assigned rights and duties in relation to breeding activities and products, such as breeders’ privilege, farmers’ rights and fair prices for (farmer) contract seed producers | |
| Agrobiodiversity | Enhancing agro-biodiversity in farming systems; within and among crop species; improve diversity in major and small crops | |
| Ecosystem services | Improving breeding strategies, breeding products and crop traits that support ecosystem services | |
| Climate robustness | Creating climate robust and flexible breeding strategies and products that provide yield and quality stability under variable conditions |
Fig. 5Representation of systems-based breeding as a fifth, overarching breeding orientation integrating the strengths of the four breeding orientations earlier described