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Organic Crop Breeding
Edith T. Lammerts van Bueren (Edited by), E Lammerts van Bu (Author), James R. Myers (Edited by)
9780470958582, Wiley
Hardback, published 3 February 2012
312 pages
25.4 x 18 x 1.8 cm, 0.78 kg
“The editors have done an excellent job in putting together a well-organized and informative book, which covers theory, practice, issues and the latest research.” (Experimental Agriculture, 4 October 2012)
Organic Crop Breeding provides readers with a thorough review of the latest efforts by crop breeders and geneticists to develop improved varieties for organic production. The book opens with chapters looking at breeding efforts that focus on specific valuable traits such as quality, pest and disease resistance as well as the impacts improved breeding efforts can have on organic production. The second part of the book is a series of crop specific case studies that look at breeding efforts currently underway from around the world in crops ranging from carrots to corn. Organic Crop Breeding includes chapters from leading researchers in the field and is carefully edited by two pioneers in the field. Organic Crop Breeding provides valuable insight for crop breeders, geneticist, crop science professionals, researchers, and advanced students in this quickly emerging field.
Contributors xiii Foreword xix Preface xxi Acknowledgments xxiii Section 1 General Topics Related to Organic Plant Breeding 1 Chapter 1 Organic Crop Breeding: Integrating Organic Agricultural Approaches and Traditional and Modern Plant Breeding Methods 3 Introduction 3 How Different Are Organic Farming Systems? 4 Consequences for Cultivar Requirements 5 From Cultivar Evaluation to Organic Seed Production and Plant Breeding Programs 6 The History of Organic Crop Breeding in Europe and the United States 8 Perspectives and Challenges for Breeding for Organic Agriculture 11 Conclusion 12 References 12 Chapter 2 Nutrient Management in Organic Farming and Consequences for Direct and Indirect Selection Strategies 15 Introduction 15 Availability of Nutrients in Organic Farming 16 Roots: The Hidden Potential 17 Even Greater Complexity: Plant-Microbe-Soil Interactions 21 Importance of Selection Environments 27 Breeding Strategies 30 References 32 Chapter 3 Pest and Disease Management in Organic Farming: Implications and Inspirations for Plant Breeding 39 Introduction 39 Plant Protection in Organic Farming 42 Key Target Areas of Plant Breeding for Organic Plant Protection 46 Breeding Goals for Ecological Plant Protection 49 Plant Breeding Approaches Directly Targeting Pests or Diseases 50 Plant Breeding Approaches with Indirect Effects on Plant Health 53 Discussion and Conclusions 54 References 55 Chapter 4 Approaches to Breed for Improved Weed Suppression in Organically Grown Cereals 61 Crop Competitiveness against Weeds 62 Crop Traits Involved in Weed Suppression 63 Selection of Traits and Their Evaluation in Plant Breeding Programs 64 Selection Strategies 68 Understanding Crop-Weed Interactions to Assist Plant Breeding 70 Concluding Remarks and Wider Perspectives 71 References 72 Chapter 5 Breeding for Genetically Diverse Populations: Variety Mixtures and Evolutionary Populations 77 Introduction 77 Benefits of Genetic Diversity for Organic Agriculture 79 On-Farm Conservation of Useful Genetic Diversity 80 Breeding Strategies 81 Conclusion 94 References 94 Chapter 6 Centralized or Decentralized Breeding: The Potentials of Participatory Approaches for Low-Input and Organic Agriculture 99 Introduction 99 Centralized and Decentralized Breeding: Definitions 100 What Can Be Decentralized in Breeding and Why? 100 Participatory Approaches 102 PPB: A Single Term Yielding Different Approaches 102 Some Examples of PPB for Organic and Low Input Agriculture in Southern Countries 106 Some Examples of PPB for Organic and Low Input Agriculture in Northern Countries 113 General Conclusions and Limits of PPB Approaches in Organic Farming 119 References 120 Chapter 7 Values and Principles in Organic Farming and Consequences for Breeding Approaches and Techniques 125 Introduction 125 Arguments against Genetic Engineering 126 Organic Basic Principles 127 Toward Organic Breeding 130 From Values to Criteria: Evaluation of Breeding Techniques 131 How to Deal with Varieties Bred with Non-compliant Techniques? 132 Toward Appropriate Standards to Promote Organic Plant Breeding 135 Discussion and Challenges for Organic Plant Breeding 136 References 136 Chapter 8 Plant Breeding, Variety Release, and Seed Commercialization: Laws and Policies Applied to the Organic Sector 139 Introduction 139 The Developments of Plant Breeding and the Emergence of Seed Laws 139 Variety Registration 142 Seed Quality Control and Certification 144 Special Needs for Organic Agriculture 146 A Recent Development in Europe: Conservation Varieties 148 Intellectual Property Rights and Plant Breeding 151 Discussion 154 Conclusions 156 Notes 156 References 157 Section 2 Organic Plant Breeding in Specific Crops 161 Chapter 9 Wheat: Breeding for Organic Farming Systems 163 Introduction 163 Methods 163 Traits for Selection in Organic Breeding Programs 168 A Case Study for EPB: Lexi’s Project 170 A Case Study for Breeding within a Supply Chain Approach: Peter Kunz and Sativa 171 Conclusion 171 References 172 Chapter 10 Maize: Breeding and Field Testing for Organic Farmers 175 Introduction 175 What Kind of Maize do Organic Farmers Want? 175 Are There Viable Alternatives to Single Cross Hybrids? 176 Testing and Using Alternative Hybrids 178 Are There Benefits for Breeding under Organic Conditions? 178 For Which Traits Is It Necessary to Test under Organic Conditions? 179 Choice of Parents for Breeding Programs 181 Breeding Programs 182 Future Directions 186 Notes 186 References 188 Chapter 11 Rice: Crop Breeding Using Farmer-Led Participatory Plant Breeding 191 Introduction 191 MASIPAG and Participatory Rice Breeding 192 Beyond PPB: Farmer-Led Rice Breeding 193 The Breeding Process 194 Outcomes of the MASIPAG Program 198 Outlook 200 References 201 Chapter 12 Soybean: Breeding for Organic Farming Systems 203 Introduction 203 Agronomic Characters 204 Seed Quality Features 208 Considerations on Breeding Methods 211 References 212 Chapter 13 Faba Bean: Breeding for Organic Farming Systems 215 Purposes of Breeding and Growing Faba Bean 215 Genetic and Botanical Basics of Breeding Faba Bean 216 Methodological Considerations 218 Traits to Be Improved in Faba Bean Breeding 221 Open Questions, Need for Action 223 References 224 Chapter 14 Potato: Perspectives to Breed for an Organic Crop Ideotype 227 Introduction 227 Required Cultivar Characteristics 228 Introgression Breeding and Applied Techniques 232 Participatory Approach: An Example from the Netherlands 233 Outlook 234 References 234 Chapter 15 Tomato: Breeding for Improved Disease Resistance in Fresh Market and Home Garden Varieties 239 Introduction 239 Botanical and Genetic Characteristics of Tomato 240 Rationale for Breeding Tomatoes within Organic Systems 240 Breeding Needs with Focus on Organic Production 243 Case Studies: Breeding for Late Blight Resistance in Europe and North America 245 Outlook 247 References 248 Chapter 16 Brassicas: Breeding Cole Crops for Organic Agriculture 251 Introduction 251 Rationale for Breeding within Organic Systems 251 Plant Biology 252 Traits Needed for Adaptation to Organic Production 253 Consideration of Breeding Methods 257 A Farmer Participatory Broccoli Breeding Program 258 Outlook 260 References 261 Chapter 17 Onions: Breeding Onions for Low-Input and Organic Agriculture 263 Introduction 263 Robust Onion Cultivars 264 Breeding for Improved Nutrient Acquisition 265 Mycorrhizal Symbiosis and Product Quality 269 Conclusion 270 References 271 Index 273
William F. Tracy
Edith T. Lammerts van Bueren and James R. Myers
Edith T. Lammerts van Bueren and James R. Myers
Monika Messmer, Isabell Hildermann, Kristian Thorup-Kristensen, and Zed Rengel
Thomas F. Döring, Marco Pautasso, Martin S. Wolfe and Maria R. Finckh
Steve P. Hoad, Nils-Øve Bertholdsson, Daniel Neuhoff and Ulrich Köpke Background 61
Julie C. Dawson and Isabelle Goldringer
Dominique Desclaux, Salvatore Ceccarelli, John Navazio, Micaela Coley,Gilles Trouche, Silvio Aguirre, Eva Weltzien, and Jacques Lançon
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Charito P. Medina
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Wolfgang Link and Lamiae Ghaouti
Marjolein Tiemens-Hulscher, Edith T. Lammerts van Bueren and Ronald C.B. Hutten
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James R. Myers, Laurie McKenzie, and Roeland E. Voorrips
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Subject Areas: Agriculture & farming [TV]
