Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture

Implementation of context-specific solutions, including cultivation of varieties adapted to current and future climatic conditions, have been found to be effective in establishing resilient, climate-smart agricultural systems. Gene banks play a pivotal role in this. However, a large fraction of the...

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Autores principales: Gambart, C., Van Wesemael, J., Swennen, R., Tardieu, F., Carpentier, S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172494
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author Gambart, C.
Van Wesemael, J.
Swennen, R.
Tardieu, F.
Carpentier, S.
author_browse Carpentier, S.
Gambart, C.
Swennen, R.
Tardieu, F.
Van Wesemael, J.
author_facet Gambart, C.
Van Wesemael, J.
Swennen, R.
Tardieu, F.
Carpentier, S.
author_sort Gambart, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Implementation of context-specific solutions, including cultivation of varieties adapted to current and future climatic conditions, have been found to be effective in establishing resilient, climate-smart agricultural systems. Gene banks play a pivotal role in this. However, a large fraction of the collections remains neither genotyped nor phenotyped. Hypothesizing that significant genotypic diversity in Musa temperature responses exists, this study aimed to assess the diversity in the world's largest banana gene bank in terms of base temperature (Tbase) and to evaluate its impact on plant performance in the East African highlands during a projected climate scenario. One hundred and sixteen gene bank accessions were evaluated in the BananaTainer, a tailor-made high throughput phenotyping installation. Plant growth was quantified in response to temperature and genotype-specific Tbase were modelled. Growth responses of two genotypes were validated under greenhouse conditions, and gas exchange capacity measurements were made. The model confirmed genotype-specific Tbase, with 30% of the accessions showing a Tbase below the reference of 14°C. The Mutika/Lujugira subgroup, endemic to the East African highlands, appeared to display a low Tbase, although within subgroup diversity was revealed. Greenhouse validation further showed low temperature sensitivity/tolerance to be related to the photosynthetic capacity. This study, therefore, significantly advances the debate of within species diversity in temperature growth responses, while at the same time unlocking the power of gene banks. Moreover, with this case study on banana, we provide a high throughput method to reveal the existing genotypic diversity in temperature responses, paving the way for future research to establish climate-smart varieties.
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spelling CGSpace1724942025-11-11T19:07:41Z Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture Gambart, C. Van Wesemael, J. Swennen, R. Tardieu, F. Carpentier, S. climate-smart agriculture food security genotyping diversity growth rate gene banks Implementation of context-specific solutions, including cultivation of varieties adapted to current and future climatic conditions, have been found to be effective in establishing resilient, climate-smart agricultural systems. Gene banks play a pivotal role in this. However, a large fraction of the collections remains neither genotyped nor phenotyped. Hypothesizing that significant genotypic diversity in Musa temperature responses exists, this study aimed to assess the diversity in the world's largest banana gene bank in terms of base temperature (Tbase) and to evaluate its impact on plant performance in the East African highlands during a projected climate scenario. One hundred and sixteen gene bank accessions were evaluated in the BananaTainer, a tailor-made high throughput phenotyping installation. Plant growth was quantified in response to temperature and genotype-specific Tbase were modelled. Growth responses of two genotypes were validated under greenhouse conditions, and gas exchange capacity measurements were made. The model confirmed genotype-specific Tbase, with 30% of the accessions showing a Tbase below the reference of 14°C. The Mutika/Lujugira subgroup, endemic to the East African highlands, appeared to display a low Tbase, although within subgroup diversity was revealed. Greenhouse validation further showed low temperature sensitivity/tolerance to be related to the photosynthetic capacity. This study, therefore, significantly advances the debate of within species diversity in temperature growth responses, while at the same time unlocking the power of gene banks. Moreover, with this case study on banana, we provide a high throughput method to reveal the existing genotypic diversity in temperature responses, paving the way for future research to establish climate-smart varieties. 2025-01 2025-01-30T09:46:52Z 2025-01-30T09:46:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172494 en Open Access application/pdf Gambart, C., Van Wesemael, J., Swennen, R., Tardieu, F. & Carpentier, S. (2025). Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate‐smart agriculture. Food and Energy Security, 14(1): e70029, 1-11.
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
food security
genotyping
diversity
growth rate
gene banks
Gambart, C.
Van Wesemael, J.
Swennen, R.
Tardieu, F.
Carpentier, S.
Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture
title Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture
title_full Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture
title_fullStr Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture
title_full_unstemmed Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture
title_short Unlocking the power of gene banks: diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate-smart agriculture
title_sort unlocking the power of gene banks diversity in base growth temperature provides opportunities for climate smart agriculture
topic climate-smart agriculture
food security
genotyping
diversity
growth rate
gene banks
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172494
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