McClure Kendra A, Sawler Jason, Gardner Kyle M, Money Daniel, Myles Sean
Department of Plant and Animal Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University, Truro, NS, B2N 5E3, Canada Department of Plant Agriculture, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, N1G 2W1, Canada.
Department of Plant and Animal Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University, Truro, NS, B2N 5E3, Canada.
Am J Bot. 2014 Oct;101(10):1780-90. doi: 10.3732/ajb.1400143. Epub 2014 Sep 11.
Perennial crops represent important fresh and processed food sources worldwide, but advancements in breeding perennials are often impeded due to their very nature. The perennial crops we rely on most for food take several years to reach production maturity and require large spaces to grow, which make breeding new cultivars costly compared with most annual crops. Because breeding perennials is inefficient and expensive, they are often grown in monocultures consisting of small numbers of elite cultivars that are vegetatively propagated for decades or even centuries. This practice puts many perennial crops at risk for calamity since they remain stationary in the face of evolving pest and disease pressures. Although there is tremendous genetic diversity available to them, perennial crop breeders often struggle to generate commercially successful cultivars in a timely and cost-effective manner because of the high costs of breeding. Moreover, consumers often expect the same cultivars to be available indefinitely, and there is often little or no incentive for growers and retailers to take the risk of adopting new cultivars. While genomics studies linking DNA variants to commercially important traits have been performed in diverse perennial crops, the translation of these studies into accelerated breeding of improved cultivars has been limited. Here we explain the "perennial problem" in detail and demonstrate how modern genomics tools can significantly improve the cost effectiveness of breeding perennial crops and thereby prevent crucial food sources from succumbing to the perils of perpetual propagation.
多年生作物是全球重要的新鲜和加工食品来源,但由于其自身特性,多年生作物的育种进展常常受到阻碍。我们最依赖的多年生粮食作物需要数年时间才能达到生产成熟期,且需要大片土地来种植,这使得与大多数一年生作物相比,培育新的栽培品种成本高昂。由于多年生作物育种效率低下且成本高昂,它们通常以单一栽培的形式种植,由少数几个精英品种组成,这些品种通过营养繁殖延续了数十年甚至数百年。这种做法使许多多年生作物面临灾难风险,因为面对不断演变的病虫害压力,它们保持不变。尽管多年生作物有巨大的遗传多样性,但由于育种成本高昂,多年生作物育种者往往难以及时且经济高效地培育出商业上成功的品种。此外,消费者通常期望能无限期获得相同的品种,种植者和零售商通常几乎没有或完全没有动力去冒险采用新品种。虽然已经在多种多年生作物中开展了将DNA变异与商业上重要的性状联系起来的基因组学研究,但将这些研究转化为加速培育改良品种的工作却很有限。在此,我们详细解释“多年生作物问题”,并展示现代基因组学工具如何能显著提高多年生作物育种的成本效益,从而防止关键的食物来源因长期繁殖的风险而遭受损失。