Abstract

The ICARDA’s durum wheat breeding program was established in 1977 in Aleppo, Syria, where it continued its work targeted to the drylands of the developing world until 2012, when it was forced to relocate. This movement represented an occasion to measure the impact of 35 years of public breeding via a detailed genetic gain (GG) study. A total of 22 ICARDA’s historical entries representing three decades of work (1974–1984, 1985–1994, or 1995–2004), were placed in competition with elites from the most recent decade (2005–2011). A total of 10 environments and 7 sites were used for the assessment. Decade-wise GG for grain yield was measured to reveal >9% (equal 0.9% per year) at 8 of the environments, while no progress was found for the dry and cold conditions of the Atlas Mountains. Combined analysis revealed an average GG per year of 0.7%, mostly driven by earlier flowering and an increase in spike density. The germplasm was also characterized with 60 polymorphic SNPs to reveal that the breeding process has already eroded 6.3% of the original genetic diversity, and that over 3-folds reduction has occurred for rare alleles. Clustering analysis confirmed that two sub-populations have substantially disappeared under the breeding selection pressure. The results presented here show that good progress was made till now, but at the cost of reducing genetic diversity and pushing toward very early genotypes. A revamped strategy is then needed to continue delivering germplasm that is meaningful to breeders worldwide.

Highlights

  • The durum wheat breeding program of the International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA) was funded in 1977 in Aleppo, Syria

  • The decision of using “decades” instead of “year” for measuring genetic gain was made to account for the year-to-year variation in funds, available staff, agro-climatic variation, and research advances which inevitably result in different annual rates of accuracy but have less average influence across decades

  • Since its inception the ICARDA durum wheat breeding effort has been dedicated to the development of cultivars well adapted to drought conditions, with some significant success stories

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Summary

Introduction

The durum wheat breeding program of the International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA) was funded in 1977 in Aleppo, Syria. Plc/Ruff//Gta/Rtte), which was obtained from pedigree selection of a CIMMYT-generated F5 population. Sister lines of this cultivar were later released in Cyprus, Jordan, Lebanon, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria and Turkey to become one of the 10 most successful durum cultivars of all time. Cham 5, Jori/Haurani) obtained by ICARDA’s hybridization program initiated nine years before Sister lines of this cross between a CIMMYT elite and a Middle East landrace were later released in Algeria, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey, resulting in one of the 10 most successful durum cultivars of all time. Until 2018, 130 varieties have been released in 22 countries using the ICARDA bred germplasm [2]

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