Abstract

Landraces are heterogeneous populations and their variability goes through continuous alterations because of physical, genetic, and epigenetic procedures exacerbated by the ongoing climatic changes. Appropriate stewardship of landrace diversity is pivotal to promote its longevity in a manner that is sustainable from the farming perspective. A seed multiplication procedure is presented based on the assumption that in order to improve effectiveness in resource use and increase seed productivity, landraces should comprise genotypes which minimize intra-species competition. These aforementioned genotypes should be of the “weak competitor” ideotype, which are selected so as to alleviate the interplant competition and reach as high as possible crop stand uniformity. Stand uniformity is essential to ensure the same growing conditions for each plant. Reduced intra-crop inequality and equal use of inputs by individual plants will optimize crop performance. Precisely, the “weak competitor” is most often of high yield potential due to a negative association between yielding and competitive ability. Therefore, the suggested procedure involves initial reproduction at nil-competition (widely spaced plants to preclude any plant-to-plant interference for inputs) where “off-type” and low yielding plants are omitted, followed by subsequent multiplication at dense stands. This may represent an effective cultural practice to improve also the landrace health status concerning seed-borne diseases in the absence of certification systems.

Highlights

  • The increased awareness of traditional crop varieties for specific market uses is driving interest in describing regionally adapted crop varieties, or landraces [1]

  • Landraces lag behind the commercial varieties in productivity [4], growers prefer them for cultivation under traditional low input agricultural systems thanks to higher yield stability

  • Natural selection may gradually lead to seed degradation and landrace degeneration from preferential and gradual proliferation of the strong competitors-low yielders at the expense to weak competitors-high yielders, due to the inverse connection of yielding with competitive ability [25,32,41]

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Summary

Introduction

The increased awareness of traditional crop varieties for specific market uses is driving interest in describing regionally adapted crop varieties, or landraces [1]. The paper ends up with a pilot scheme that entails the manipulation of landrace diversity through bulk selection under conditions approaching absolute absence of intra-species competition, with the aim of establishing continuous landrace adaptation to an ever-changing environment. Such a breeding strategy may expand landrace longevity and adoption by farmers reluctant to apply the traditional way of cultivation, while parallel cultivation of the landrace by traditional farmers would ensure the evolution of landrace by the natural selection process as well. Similar investigations for landraces of species cultivated for biomass (silage or hay) production are not available and future relevant research might be enlightening

Crop Stand Variation and Resource Use Efficiency
Mechanisms of New Variation
General Approach of Breeding at Nil-Competition
Bulk Selection to Replenish the Landrace Seed
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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