Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States

Crop wild relatives native to the United States have proved useful as genetic resources in breeding more productive, nutritious, and resilient crops. Their utilization is expected to increase with better information about the species and improving breeding tools. But this utilization may be constrai...

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Autores principales: Khoury, Colin K., Greene, Stephanie L., Williams, Karen A., Sosa, Chrystian C., Richards, Chris
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88243
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author Khoury, Colin K.
Greene, Stephanie L.
Williams, Karen A.
Sosa, Chrystian C.
Richards, Chris
author_browse Greene, Stephanie L.
Khoury, Colin K.
Richards, Chris
Sosa, Chrystian C.
Williams, Karen A.
author_facet Khoury, Colin K.
Greene, Stephanie L.
Williams, Karen A.
Sosa, Chrystian C.
Richards, Chris
author_sort Khoury, Colin K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Crop wild relatives native to the United States have proved useful as genetic resources in breeding more productive, nutritious, and resilient crops. Their utilization is expected to increase with better information about the species and improving breeding tools. But this utilization may be constrained by their limited representation in genebanks and the ongoing loss of wild populations to habitat modification, invasive species, pollution, over-collecting, and climate change. We report on a series of related initiatives contributing to conservation of crop wild relatives in the United States. An inventory of wild relatives has documented taxa related to a broad range of food, forage and feed, medicinal, ornamental, and industrial crops. Valuable species are threatened in the wild, and few accessions of these taxa are currently conserved ex situ. Potential distribution models based on historical occurrence information are clarifying where the species diversity of wild relatives is likely to be concentrated, and a gap analysis methodology is facilitating efforts to identify those taxa and geographic areas of particular conservation concern. A novel collaboration between the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service and USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS) is making progress studying, collecting for genebank conservation, and protecting in situ a number of crop wild relative species. We discuss the value of broadening partnerships between agencies and aligning with ongoing regional and international initiatives to conserve, research, and utilize crop wild relative diversity.
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spelling CGSpace882432025-12-02T10:59:51Z Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States Khoury, Colin K. Greene, Stephanie L. Williams, Karen A. Sosa, Chrystian C. Richards, Chris plant genetic resources wild plants resource conservation breeding recursos genéticos vegetales plantas silvestres conservación de los recuros mejora Crop wild relatives native to the United States have proved useful as genetic resources in breeding more productive, nutritious, and resilient crops. Their utilization is expected to increase with better information about the species and improving breeding tools. But this utilization may be constrained by their limited representation in genebanks and the ongoing loss of wild populations to habitat modification, invasive species, pollution, over-collecting, and climate change. We report on a series of related initiatives contributing to conservation of crop wild relatives in the United States. An inventory of wild relatives has documented taxa related to a broad range of food, forage and feed, medicinal, ornamental, and industrial crops. Valuable species are threatened in the wild, and few accessions of these taxa are currently conserved ex situ. Potential distribution models based on historical occurrence information are clarifying where the species diversity of wild relatives is likely to be concentrated, and a gap analysis methodology is facilitating efforts to identify those taxa and geographic areas of particular conservation concern. A novel collaboration between the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service and USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS) is making progress studying, collecting for genebank conservation, and protecting in situ a number of crop wild relative species. We discuss the value of broadening partnerships between agencies and aligning with ongoing regional and international initiatives to conserve, research, and utilize crop wild relative diversity. 2017 2017-10-10T19:24:08Z 2017-10-10T19:24:08Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88243 en Open Access application/pdf Khoury, Colin K.; Greene, Stephanie L.; Williams, Karen A.; Sosa, Chrystian C.; Richards, Chris. 2017. Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States . In: Sniezko RA., Man G, Hipkins V, Woeste K, Gwaze D, Kliejunas JT, McTeague BA (tech. cords.) Gene conservation of tree species–banking on the future. Proceedings of a workshop (16-19 May 2016, Chicago, Illinois, USA) 31-36 p
spellingShingle plant genetic resources
wild plants
resource conservation
breeding
recursos genéticos vegetales
plantas silvestres
conservación de los recuros
mejora
Khoury, Colin K.
Greene, Stephanie L.
Williams, Karen A.
Sosa, Chrystian C.
Richards, Chris
Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States
title Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States
title_full Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States
title_fullStr Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States
title_short Conservation Priorities for Tree Crop Wild Relatives in the United States
title_sort conservation priorities for tree crop wild relatives in the united states
topic plant genetic resources
wild plants
resource conservation
breeding
recursos genéticos vegetales
plantas silvestres
conservación de los recuros
mejora
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88243
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