User:LaGuanegna

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The wild relatives of crop plants or crop wild relatives, which include the progenitors of crops as well as other species more or less closely related to them, constitute an increasingly important resource for improving agricultural production and for maintaining sustainable agro-ecosystems[1][2]. With the advent of climate change and greater ecosystem instability CWR are likely to prove a critical resource in ensuring food security for the new millennium. [3] It was Nikolai Vavilov, a Russian Botanist who first realized the importance of crop wild relatives in the early 20th century.[4] Genetic material from CWR has been utilized by humans for thousands of years to improve the quality and yield of crops. Farmers have used traditional breeding methods for millennia and in Mexico, for example, wild maize (Zea mexicana) is routinely grown alongside maize to promote natural crossing and improve yields. More recently, plant breeders have utilised CWR genes to improve a wide range of crops like rice (Oryza sativa), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) and grain legumes.[5] CWR have contributed many useful genes to crop plants, and modern varieties of most major crops now contain genes from their wild relatives. Therefore CWR are wild plants related to socio-economically important species including food, fodder and forage crops, medicinal plants, condiments, ornamental, and forestry species, as well as plants used for industrial purposes, such as oils and fibres, and to which they can contribute beneficial traits. CWR can be defined as "A crop wild relative is a wild plant taxon that has an indirect use derived from its relatively close genetic relationship to a crop…”[6]

  1. ^ Bioversity International, (2006). Crop wild relatives. Bioversity International, Rome.
  2. ^ FAO, (1998). The State of the World’s Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. FAO, Rome; FAO, (2008). Establishment of a global network for the in situ conservation of crop wild relatives: status and needs. FAO, Rome
  3. ^ Maxted, N., Ford-Lloyd, B.V. and Kell, S.P., (2008). Crop wild relatives: establishing the context. In: Maxted, N., Ford-Lloyd, B.V., Kell, S.P. Iriondo, J., Dulloo, E. and Turok, J. (eds.) Crop Wild Relative Conservation and Use. Pp. 3-30. CABI Publishing, Wallingford.
  4. ^ Vavilov, N.I., (1926). Studies in the origin of cultivated plants. Institute of Applied Botany and Plant Breeding, Leningrad.
  5. ^ Hajjar, R. and Hodgkin, T., (2007). The use of wild relatives in crop improvement: a survey of developments over the last 20 years. Euphytica, 156: 1-13.
  6. ^ Maxted, N., Ford-Lloyd, B.V., Jury, S.L., Kell, S.P. and Scholten, M.A. (2006). Towards a definition of a crop wild relative. Biodiversity and Conservation 15(8):2673-2685.