Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Speed Breeding for Indian Agriculture:A Rapid Method for Development of New Crop Varieties


Affiliations
1 ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
 

In agriculture, conventional breeding takes a longer time for the development of crop varieties with a minimum of 810 years of breeding cycles. In the context of breeding, rapid generation advancement of segregating populations towards reaching homozygosity will facilitate genetic gain for key traits and the rapid development of improved cultivars. Extra-terrestrial experiments by NASA, USA, to grow crop seeds in space inspired scientists in the University of Queensland and University of Sydney in Australia to develop a speed-breeding platform. Speed breeding uses an artificial environment with enhanced light duration to create longer daylight regimes to speed up the breeding cycles of photoinsensitive crops.
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/01/180101144758.htm
  • Watson, A. et al., Nature Plants, 2018; https://doi.org/10.1038/s41477-017-0083-8
  • http://www.newsweek.com/growing-plants-speed-breeding-could-be-key-feed-worlds-exploding-population-767450
  • https://www.jic.ac.uk/news-and-events/news/2018/01/speed-breeding/

Abstract Views: 506

PDF Views: 147




  • Speed Breeding for Indian Agriculture:A Rapid Method for Development of New Crop Varieties

Abstract Views: 506  |  PDF Views: 147

Authors

M. Shivakumar
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
V. Nataraj
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
Giriraj Kumawat
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
V. Rajesh
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
Subhash Chandra
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
Sanjay Gupta
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India
V. S. Bhatia
ICAR-Indian Institute of Soybean Research, Indore 452 001, India

Abstract


In agriculture, conventional breeding takes a longer time for the development of crop varieties with a minimum of 810 years of breeding cycles. In the context of breeding, rapid generation advancement of segregating populations towards reaching homozygosity will facilitate genetic gain for key traits and the rapid development of improved cultivars. Extra-terrestrial experiments by NASA, USA, to grow crop seeds in space inspired scientists in the University of Queensland and University of Sydney in Australia to develop a speed-breeding platform. Speed breeding uses an artificial environment with enhanced light duration to create longer daylight regimes to speed up the breeding cycles of photoinsensitive crops.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv115%2Fi7%2F1241-1241