Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas

Native agrobiodiversity become endangered and even lost due to natural disasters in red zone area such as earthquake that hit Nepal on April and May 2015. Endangered agricultural genetic resources should be rescued and revival of disrupted local seed system was essential for sustainable and producti...

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Autores principales: Joshi, Bal Krishna, Gauchan, Devendra, Sapkota, Shreejana, Poudyal, Kritesh, Ghimire, Krishna Hari, Dongol, Durga Man Singh
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Nepal Journals Online 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110708
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author Joshi, Bal Krishna
Gauchan, Devendra
Sapkota, Shreejana
Poudyal, Kritesh
Ghimire, Krishna Hari
Dongol, Durga Man Singh
author_browse Dongol, Durga Man Singh
Gauchan, Devendra
Ghimire, Krishna Hari
Joshi, Bal Krishna
Poudyal, Kritesh
Sapkota, Shreejana
author_facet Joshi, Bal Krishna
Gauchan, Devendra
Sapkota, Shreejana
Poudyal, Kritesh
Ghimire, Krishna Hari
Dongol, Durga Man Singh
author_sort Joshi, Bal Krishna
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Native agrobiodiversity become endangered and even lost due to natural disasters in red zone area such as earthquake that hit Nepal on April and May 2015. Endangered agricultural genetic resources should be rescued and revival of disrupted local seed system was essential for sustainable and productive agriculture in earthquake affected areas. The objectives of this paper are to document methods employed to rescue germplasm and rebuild local seed systems in earthquake affected areas to restore lost crop diversity and strengthen local seed systems. Among 14 severely hit districts by April 2015 earthquake in Nepal, 10 districts were selected for germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed system. We surveyed households and sensitized relevant stakeholders. Earthquake affected areas were declared as red zones and status of crop landraces were assessed through survey, five cell analysis and focus group discussion. Three germplasm rescue techniques, namely direct rescue, diversity fair and indirect rescue were applied. Local seed systems were rebuilt through diversity fair, diversity block, seed exchange, repatriation and diversity kits. Collected accessions were characterized, multiplied and conserved in National Genebank and community seed banks. About 5-10% of total local crop diversity (based on the landraces) were lost due to earthquake in these districts. A total of 921 accessions of 61 crops along with 284 rare and endangered crop landraces were collected and rescued from 35 VDCs of 10 severely earthquake affected districts. Climate analogue sites and climate smart germplasm were identified for some of earthquake affected areas, and five landraces of four crops were repatriated. Participatory seed exchange, diversity fairs and 200 diversity kits (containing 3 to 5 varieties) were employed to revive the local seed systems. Farmers’ preferred landraces were conserved in Community Seed Bank in Lamjung and Dolakha and all collections were conserved in Naional Genebank, Khumaltar, Nepal. The study concludes that multiple approaches and tools are necessary for germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems from red zone area
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spelling CGSpace1107082025-11-11T19:07:04Z Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas Joshi, Bal Krishna Gauchan, Devendra Sapkota, Shreejana Poudyal, Kritesh Ghimire, Krishna Hari Dongol, Durga Man Singh agrobiodiversity natural disasters earthquakes germplasm landraces gene banks restoration desastres naturales germoplasma restauración Native agrobiodiversity become endangered and even lost due to natural disasters in red zone area such as earthquake that hit Nepal on April and May 2015. Endangered agricultural genetic resources should be rescued and revival of disrupted local seed system was essential for sustainable and productive agriculture in earthquake affected areas. The objectives of this paper are to document methods employed to rescue germplasm and rebuild local seed systems in earthquake affected areas to restore lost crop diversity and strengthen local seed systems. Among 14 severely hit districts by April 2015 earthquake in Nepal, 10 districts were selected for germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed system. We surveyed households and sensitized relevant stakeholders. Earthquake affected areas were declared as red zones and status of crop landraces were assessed through survey, five cell analysis and focus group discussion. Three germplasm rescue techniques, namely direct rescue, diversity fair and indirect rescue were applied. Local seed systems were rebuilt through diversity fair, diversity block, seed exchange, repatriation and diversity kits. Collected accessions were characterized, multiplied and conserved in National Genebank and community seed banks. About 5-10% of total local crop diversity (based on the landraces) were lost due to earthquake in these districts. A total of 921 accessions of 61 crops along with 284 rare and endangered crop landraces were collected and rescued from 35 VDCs of 10 severely earthquake affected districts. Climate analogue sites and climate smart germplasm were identified for some of earthquake affected areas, and five landraces of four crops were repatriated. Participatory seed exchange, diversity fairs and 200 diversity kits (containing 3 to 5 varieties) were employed to revive the local seed systems. Farmers’ preferred landraces were conserved in Community Seed Bank in Lamjung and Dolakha and all collections were conserved in Naional Genebank, Khumaltar, Nepal. The study concludes that multiple approaches and tools are necessary for germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems from red zone area 2020 2021-01-05T14:28:41Z 2021-01-05T14:28:41Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110708 en Open Access application/pdf Nepal Journals Online Joshi, B.K.; Gauchan, D.; Sapkota, S.; Poudyal, K.; Ghimire, K.H.; Dongol, D.M.S. (2020) Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas. Journal of Agriculture and Natural Resources, 3(2) p. 9-20. ISSN: 2661-6270
spellingShingle agrobiodiversity
natural disasters
earthquakes
germplasm
landraces
gene banks
restoration
desastres naturales
germoplasma
restauración
Joshi, Bal Krishna
Gauchan, Devendra
Sapkota, Shreejana
Poudyal, Kritesh
Ghimire, Krishna Hari
Dongol, Durga Man Singh
Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
title Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
title_full Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
title_fullStr Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
title_full_unstemmed Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
title_short Germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
title_sort germplasm rescue and rebuilding local seed systems in red zone areas
topic agrobiodiversity
natural disasters
earthquakes
germplasm
landraces
gene banks
restoration
desastres naturales
germoplasma
restauración
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110708
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AT poudyalkritesh germplasmrescueandrebuildinglocalseedsystemsinredzoneareas
AT ghimirekrishnahari germplasmrescueandrebuildinglocalseedsystemsinredzoneareas
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