Challenges of In Situ Conservation of Crop Wild Relatives
Turk J Bot
32 (2008) 421-432
© TÜBİTAK
Challenges of In Situ Conservation of Crop Wild Relatives
Vernon Hilton HEYWOOD
Plant Science Laboratories, School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Reading RG6 6AS - UK
Received: 17.09.2008
Accepted: 04.11.2008
Abstract: Crop wild relatives (CWRs) will gain in importance as changing climates put both traditional and advanced cultivars under
increasing stress, leading to a need for plant breeding to produce new varieties able to grow under the new climate regimes.
Traditionally, the approach to the conservation of CWRs has been ex situ – the collection and maintenance of seed accessions in
national, regional, and international germplasm banks, supplemented by field genebanks for species with recalcitrant seeds. More
recently the need to maintain CWRs in their natural habitats (in situ) has been advocated. This is very different from on-farm
conservation of traditional land races and is a complex multidisciplinary process. Particular problems that have to be addressed include
the adoption of a workable definition of what is a CWR, application of priority-determining mechanisms because of the large number
of candidate species of CWRs, assessment of the effectiveness of conservation approaches, the relative costs of in situ and ex situ
approaches, integration of CWR in situ conservation into national programmes, and the challenges posed by global change. CWRs
may be conserved in both protected and non-protected areas. Presence in the former is no guarantee of their survival and in most
cases some degree of management intervention is required. Experience derived from recent EU- and GEF-funded CWR conservation
initiatives will be drawn upon.
Key Words: Crop wild relatives, conservation, in situ, global climate change
Introduction
The importance of CWRs
In the introduction to Hoyt’s Conserving the Wild
Relatives of Crops (1998), IBPGR, IUCN, and WWF wrote
‘The conservation of crop genetic resources–the plants
that feed us and their wild relatives–is one of the most
important issues for humankind today’. This statement is
as true, if not more so today, as when it was written 20
years ago. One of the challenges of global change now
facing us is how to provide adequate nutrition for the
steadily growing world population in the face of changing
climatic conditions and continuing habitat loss. In meeting
that challenge, as wide a range as possible of genetic
material will be needed to breed the new cultivars
required and crop wild relatives will be an important
source of that variation. As an economic appraisal of crop
genetic resources from the United States Department of
Agriculture notes, crop genetic resources are essential to
maintaining and improving agricultural productivity:
‘Without continued genetic enhancement using diverse
germplasm from both wild and modified sources, the
gains in crop yields obtained over the past seven decades
are not sustainable, and yields might eventually grow
more slowly or even decline. Agricultural production
increasingly relies on “temporal diversity,” changing
varieties more frequently to maintain resistance to pests
and diseases’ (Rubenstein et al., 2005).
In fact, it is likely that in situ genetic variation of crop
wild relatives will now be of more value to plant breeders,
especially in the light of recent advances in biotechnology
which allow breeders increasingly to use genetic material
found in wild populations. Furthermore, these
populations contain valuable alleles at low frequencies
that have so far evaded capture in previous sampling and
breeding programmes (Williams, 1991; Franks, 1999).
On the other hand, Hajjar and Hodgkin (2007) argue
that despite such molecular and other improved
procedures, the contributions of crop wild relatives to the
development of new cultivars are less than they might
have been expected, and so clearly there is great potential
still to be exploited (but cf. Rubenstein et al., 2006).
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Challenges of In Situ Conservation of Crop Wild Relatives
In today’s context of global change, Lane (2007)
notes, ‘The irony … is that plant breeders will be relying
on wild relatives more than ever as they work to develop
domesticated crops that can adapt to changing climate
conditions. Yet because of climate change, we could end
up losing a significant amount of these critical genetic
resources at precisely the time they are most needed to
maintain agricultural production’. The likely impacts of
climate change on crop wild relatives will be considered
below.
Crop Wild Relatives in SW Asia
As Erna Bennett reminded us at the first Plant Life of
South-West Asia conference in Edinburgh in 1970
(Bennett, 1971), the region is one of the cradles of
cultivated plants and indeed of Western civilisation.
Hundreds of crop wild relatives occur in the region1,
including cereals such as wheat (Triticum), barley
(Hordeum), rye (Secale), Aegilops, legumes such as lentil
(Lens), chickpea (Cicer), fodder plants (Medicago,
Onobrychis), and in particular many fruits such as cherries
(Prunus), pears (Pyrus), apples (Malus), plum (Prunus),
pomegranate (Punica), quince (Cydonia), azarole
(Crataegus), medlar (Mespilus), figs (Ficus), and
grapevine (Vitis), and nuts such as hazelnut (Corylus),
walnut (Juglans), and pistacio (Pistacia). It is appropriate
therefore to consider what advances have been made in
the conservation and sustainable use of these valuable
resources in the intervening years.
The natural landscapes of SW Asia have been subjected
to considerable change over the past decades as a result
of change in land use, alterations in disturbance regimes,
loss of habitats or their conversion for agricultural use,
and climatic fluctuations, all of which have adversely
affected the populations of crop wild relatives that occur
there. Coordinated action is urgently needed to ensure
that as much as possible of this important genetic
variation survives for present and future generations.
Because of the international dimensions of crop genetic
resources, this is not just a problem that affects the
region, but is of global significance.
1
Problems of definition of crop wild relatives
The term crop wild relative is not a precise one and
has been variously defined and debated. Meilleur and
Hodgkin (2004) consider that a workable, consensusdriven definition would help clarify discussions of the
topic and direct efforts more effectively and suggest as a
possible definition that ‘CWRs should include the wild
congeners or closely related species of a domesticated
crop or plant species, including relatives of species
cultivated for medicinal, forestry, forage, or ornamental
reasons’.
In general terms, a CWR is a plant that is more or less
closely related to a crop and to which it may contribute
genetic material, but unlike the crop species has not been
domesticated; they are also likely to be the progenitors or
direct ancestors of crops. Crops are interpreted here as
includ (...truncated)