scholarly journals Functional Genomics for Plant Breeding

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (21) ◽  
pp. 11854
Author(s):  
Fatemeh Maghuly ◽  
Beata Myśków ◽  
Bradley J. Till

To face the rapidly growing world human population, an increase in agricultural productivity and production is necessary to overcome the enhanced food demand [...]

Author(s):  
Judith Rüschhoff ◽  
Carl Hubatsch ◽  
Jörg Priess ◽  
Thomas Scholten ◽  
Lukas Egli

Abstract Regionalization of food systems is a potential strategy to support environmental, economic and social sustainability. However, local preconditions need to be considered to assess the feasibility of such a transformation process. To better understand the potentials and perspectives of food self-sufficiency in urban and peri-urban areas, we determined the food self-sufficiency level (SSL) of a German metropolitan region, i.e., the percentage of the food demand that could be potentially provided on existing agricultural land. Main input parameters were actual food demand, agricultural productivity and its temporal variability and land availability. Furthermore, we considered changes in diet, food losses and land management. Based on current diets and agricultural productivity, the administrative region of Leipzig achieved a mean SSL of 94%, ranging from 77 to 116%. Additionally, an area of 26,932 ha, representing 12% of the regionally available agricultural land, was needed for commodities that are not cultivated regionally. Changes in food demand due to a diet shift to a more plant-based diet and reduced food losses would increase the SSL by 29 and 17%, respectively. A shift to organic agriculture would decrease the SSL by 34% due to lower crop yields compared with conventional production. However, a combination of organic agriculture with less food loss and a more plant-based diet would lead to a mean SSL of 95% (75–115%). Our results indicate the feasibility of food system regionalization in the study area under current and potential near future conditions. Addressing a combination of multiple dimensions, for example plant-based and healthier diets combined with reduced food loss and organic farming, is the most favorable approach to increase food self-sufficiency in urban and peri-urban areas and simultaneously provide synergies with social and environmental objectives.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-287
Author(s):  
Robert Koebner ◽  
Rodomiro Ortiz

A commentary on the highlights of the 2013 EUCARPIA (the European Associationc for Research on Plant Breeding) Plant Genetic Resources Section meeting at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Alnarp is presented here. The central theme of the meeting was the use of plant genetic resources in pre-breeding programmes, particularly in the context of incipient climate change and human population pressure.


1969 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 148-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Willis Sibley

In the Philippines, as in many parts of the world today, spectacular increases in human population are outstripping economic growth at an alarming rate. This phenomenon seems particularly marked in the agricultural and rural sectors, especially when agricultural productivity is contrasted with industrial growth in the region. In 1521, the year of Magellan's arrival, the Philippine population is estimated to have been about 500,000. By 1903, less than four hundred years later, the population was about 8,000,000, or a sixteenfold increase. The next thirty-six years doubled the population to 16,000,000 by 1939. By 1968, the population had soared to about 35,000,000, and at present net birth rates will double again in about twenty years. An important consequence of such rapid population growth without compensating economic gains is increasing unemployment and underemployment; another is the growing possibility of drastic shortages of food.


1988 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Mastenbroek

SUMMARYAs the art of plant breeding became a professional and increasingly expensive activity, legal protection was gradually provided in member states of UPOV (International Union for the Protection of Plant Varieties), at present 17 in number. The requirements and scope for protection by Plant Breeders' Rights (PBR) are reviewed and are considered to be favourable for plant breeders, growers and national agricultural productivity. Advantages and disadvantages of PBR and patent protection in connection with biotechnology, the rôle of multinationals as plant breeders and aspects of genetic erosion are discussed.


Author(s):  
G.T. Bryan

Biotechnology will play an essential role in the economic future of New Zealand and in maintaining the global competitiveness of our forage-based primary production. The genomics era has added a new dimension to cultivar development, with marker-assisted selection allowing more precise genome modifications during plant breeding, and plant transformation providing more direct and novel routes to cultivar improvement. The biggest impact will be the ability of researchers to consider genetic pathways and networks rather than working on "single gene fixes". Integral to functional genomics are the rapidly developing fields of proteomics and metanomics - all these skills are needed to make a complete biotechnology package. Genetics and plant breeding have made a huge contribution toward forage crop performance in pasture-based systems, and biotechnology will provide future innovations and opportunities. Several research groups worldwide are developing comprehensive genetic maps of white clover and perennial ryegrass and are linking these to functional analysis of sequence databases to identify agronomically important genes. For this approach to capture its full value, researchers will need to fully integrate functional genomics with genetics, biochemistry, plant biology, agronomy and farm system management. Strong mapping, gene discovery, functional genomics and transformation capabilities will allow high-throughput analysis of gene function and application in new cultivars, using marker-assisted breeding or in transgenic lines. These tools provide an exciting opportunity to tackle some of the challenges faced in optimising pasture-based farming systems. Keywords: biotechnology, functional genomics, gene discovery, marker-assisted selection, perennial ryegrass, plant breeding, transgenic, white clover


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