Abstract

Plant biodiversity is the foundation of our present-day food supply (including functional food and medicine) and offers humankind multiple other benefits in terms of ecosystem functions and resilience to climate change, as well as other perturbations. This Special Issue on ‘Plant Biodiversity and Genetic Resources’ comprises 32 papers covering a wide array of aspects from the definition and identification of hotspots of wild and domesticated plant biodiversity to the specifics of conservation of genetic resources of crop genepools, including breeding and research materials, landraces and crop wild relatives which collectively are the pillars of modern plant breeding, as well as of localized breeding efforts by farmers and farming communities. The integration of genomics and phenomics into germplasm and genebank management enhances the value of crop germplasm conserved ex situ, and is likely to increase its utilization in plant breeding, but presents major challenges for data management and the sharing of this information with potential users. Furthermore, also a better integration of in situ and ex situ conservation efforts will contribute to a more effective conservation and certainly to a more sustainable and efficient utilization. Other aspects such as policy, access and benefit-sharing that directly impact the use of plant biodiversity and genetic resources, as well as balanced nutrition and enhanced resilience of production systems that depend on their increased use, are also being treated. The editorial concludes with six key messages on plant biodiversity, genetic erosion, genetic resources and plant breeding, agricultural diversification, conservation of agrobiodiversity, and the evolving role and importance of genebanks.

Highlights

  • The foundation of the current global food supply is based on thousands of years of phenotypic selection of plant species and genotypes with favorable traits for cultivation and human nutrition by early farmers

  • This Special Issue on ‘Plant Biodiversity and Genetic Resources’ comprises 32 papers covering a wide array of aspects from the definition and identification of hotspots of wild and domesticated plant biodiversity to the specifics of conservation of genetic resources of crop genepools, including breeding and research materials, landraces and crop wild relatives which collectively are the pillars of modern plant breeding, as well as of localized breeding efforts by farmers and farming communities

  • The integration of genomics and phenomics into germplasm and genebank management enhances the value of crop germplasm conserved ex situ, and is likely to increase its utilization in plant breeding, but presents major challenges for data management and the sharing of this information with potential users

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The foundation of the current global food supply is based on thousands of years of phenotypic selection of plant species and genotypes with favorable traits for cultivation and human nutrition by early farmers. We encouraged contributions to this Special Issue on plant biodiversity and genetic resources in the form of original research and review papers with the aim to disseminate and promote knowledge on a wide array of aspects in this important field, which underpins sustainable agriculture and food and nutrition security in a globalized world, facing multiple challenges. As crop wild relatives are mostly found in the wild and are rather difficult to be conserved ex situ, the merits of payment for ecosystem services for in situ conservation have been analyzed by Tyak et al [21] for these germplasm resources, which are increasingly coming into the focus of plant breeders, given their broad genetic diversity, harboring many (new) traits of interest to build resistance to diseases and insect pests as well as tolerance to abiotic stresses into resilient modern crop cultivars.

Plant Biodiversity
Genetic Erosion
Genetic Resources and Plant Breeding
Agricultural Diversification
Conservation of Agrobiodiversity
Findings
The Evolving Role and Importance of Genebanks
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call