Abstract

AbstractHerbage production is regarded as having environment‐friendly credentials. However, as the ruminant production it supports is facing major challenges on sustainability, environmental footprint and human health concerns, EU herbage cultivar testing must contribute to the solutions. Before new cultivars can be sold in a member state (MS) and gain EU‐wide marketing, they must pass official tests to prove they are both novel (distinct, uniform and stable, DUS) with improved value for cultivation and use (VCU). Herbage species present specific challenges, as their allogamy imposes a wide within‐cultivar variation that adds complexity to DUS tests and their “value” is only realized in ruminant produce. Current VCU systems measure production, chemical composition and disease/stress tolerances, often on large numbers of candidate cultivars, but prohibitive labour costs and logistics mean that animal intake, ruminant output or environmental benefits cannot be measured directly. Furthermore, some candidate cultivars with proven superior VCU fail DUS even though the non‐distinct comparison is with a significantly lower performing registered cultivar. To resolve these problem cases, a “vmDUS” distinctness tool is proposed, which uses molecular markers but conforms to UPOV‐declared principles. A short overview of current grassland research shows smart proxy measures of animal value can easily and quickly be adopted into an integrated pan‐European (EU‐VCU) test network. The proposed EU‐VCU scheme will reallocate test resources to conduct these additional tests by placing MS in data sharing collaborations, while retaining their national listing authority. The benefits to all stakeholders from adopting these new testing procedures are considered.

Highlights

  • Before new herbage cultivars can be sold in any EU member state (MS) and gain EU-wide marketing, they must pass official tests to prove they are both novel and improved

  • Willett et al (2019) report that over 280 m people are regularly short of adequate food and many more have low-quality micronutrient-deficient diets that cause nutritionrelated non-communicable diseases

  • As the Plant breeders' rights (PBR) and Value for cultivation and use (VCU) tests are the gateway to the EU marketplace, they must be proactively contributing solutions for the headline issues of ruminant production

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Summary

Resistance to Acyrthosiphon kondoi

Resistance to Therioaphis maculata the technical committees of the Community Plant Variety Office (CPVO), and harmonized to UPOV guidelines (www.upov.int/ resource/en/dus_guidance.html). Gaining access to a MS NL affords automatic listing on the EU CC and so EU-wide protection, as part of the EU reference collection used in DUS tests. To gain PBR, each new candidate cultivar must be proven distinct (at the p < .01 over two testing cycles) in at least one character in every one-to-one comparison with each registered cultivar in the EU CC (the protected reference collection). Departure from these character sets is strictly curtailed, requiring prior CPVO approval and if novel, UPOV agreement

Discriminant analysis
Findings
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