Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change

Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is an important legume crop worldwide. However, abiotic and biotic stress limits bean yields to <600 kg ha−1 in low-income countries. Current low yields result in food insecurity, while demands for increased yields to match the rate of population growth combined w...

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Autores principales: Porch, Timothy G., Beaver, James S., Debouck, Daniel G., Jackson, S.A., Kelly, James D., Dempewolf, Hannes
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: MDPI 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51504
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author Porch, Timothy G.
Beaver, James S.
Debouck, Daniel G.
Jackson, S.A.
Kelly, James D.
Dempewolf, Hannes
author_browse Beaver, James S.
Debouck, Daniel G.
Dempewolf, Hannes
Jackson, S.A.
Kelly, James D.
Porch, Timothy G.
author_facet Porch, Timothy G.
Beaver, James S.
Debouck, Daniel G.
Jackson, S.A.
Kelly, James D.
Dempewolf, Hannes
author_sort Porch, Timothy G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is an important legume crop worldwide. However, abiotic and biotic stress limits bean yields to <600 kg ha−1 in low-income countries. Current low yields result in food insecurity, while demands for increased yields to match the rate of population growth combined with the threat of climate change are significant. Novel and significant advances in genetic improvement using untapped genetic diversity available in crop wild relatives and closely related species must be further explored. A meeting was organized by the Global Crop Diversity Trust to consider strategies for common bean improvement. This review resulted from that meeting and considers our current understanding of the genetic resources available for common bean improvement and the progress that has been achieved thus far through introgression of genetic diversity from wild relatives of common bean, and from closely related species, including: P. acutifolius, P. coccineus, P. costaricensis and P. dumosus. Newly developed genomic tools and their potential applications are presented. A broad outline of research for use of these genetic resources for common bean improvement in a ten-year multi-disciplinary effort is presented.
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spelling CGSpace515042024-06-26T09:37:49Z Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change Porch, Timothy G. Beaver, James S. Debouck, Daniel G. Jackson, S.A. Kelly, James D. Dempewolf, Hannes phaseolus vulgaris phaseolus wild plants biodiversity climate change adaptation genetic variation introgression plantas silvestres biodiversidad Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is an important legume crop worldwide. However, abiotic and biotic stress limits bean yields to <600 kg ha−1 in low-income countries. Current low yields result in food insecurity, while demands for increased yields to match the rate of population growth combined with the threat of climate change are significant. Novel and significant advances in genetic improvement using untapped genetic diversity available in crop wild relatives and closely related species must be further explored. A meeting was organized by the Global Crop Diversity Trust to consider strategies for common bean improvement. This review resulted from that meeting and considers our current understanding of the genetic resources available for common bean improvement and the progress that has been achieved thus far through introgression of genetic diversity from wild relatives of common bean, and from closely related species, including: P. acutifolius, P. coccineus, P. costaricensis and P. dumosus. Newly developed genomic tools and their potential applications are presented. A broad outline of research for use of these genetic resources for common bean improvement in a ten-year multi-disciplinary effort is presented. 2013 2014-11-12T13:42:25Z 2014-11-12T13:42:25Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51504 en Open Access MDPI Porch, Timothy G; Beaver, James S; Debouck, Daniel G; Jackson, Scott A; Kelly, James D; Dempewolf, Hannes. 2013. Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change. Agronomy. 3: 433-461.
spellingShingle phaseolus vulgaris
phaseolus
wild plants
biodiversity
climate change
adaptation
genetic variation
introgression
plantas silvestres
biodiversidad
Porch, Timothy G.
Beaver, James S.
Debouck, Daniel G.
Jackson, S.A.
Kelly, James D.
Dempewolf, Hannes
Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
title Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
title_full Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
title_fullStr Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
title_full_unstemmed Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
title_short Use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
title_sort use of wild relatives and closely related species to adapt common bean to climate change
topic phaseolus vulgaris
phaseolus
wild plants
biodiversity
climate change
adaptation
genetic variation
introgression
plantas silvestres
biodiversidad
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51504
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