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Measuring and predicting change in crop wild relative species. by Toby Hodgkin and Jozef Turok International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI), Rome, Italy. What is a crop wild relative?. Self- and out-pollinating annuals Grassland species
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Measuring and predicting change in crop wild relative species by Toby Hodgkin and Jozef Turok International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI), Rome, Italy
What is a crop wild relative? • Self- and out-pollinating annuals • Grassland species • Temperate forest trees (angiosperms, gymnosperms) • Weedy species • Rare, mountain endemic plants
Large variation in the characteristics… • Distribution extent and pattern • Longevity • Life form • Habitat • Are crop wild relative species different with respect to change, erosion and pollution?
Pollution • Substantial gene flow from cultivated species to primary genepool species, which are fully inter-fertile, occur together and overlap in flowering period • Examples: Hordeum spontaneum, Oryza rupifogon, Teosinte, Pennisetum, Beta maritima
Conservation objectives • Conservation of the full amplitude of variation within a species • Conservation of specific traits (frost or drought resistance)
Change • Erosion and genetic pollution • Global changes of the environment • Effects of the global climate change on crop wild relative species • Factors and processes of evolutionary change • Methods to assess change
Dispersal capability • Depends on seed biology and vector of dispersal • For long-term survival of a species under global climate change, the dispersal capability must be greater than the speed of environmental change
Gene flow Pheno-typic plasti-city Natural selection Genetic drift Mu-ta-tions Inter-population differentiation Constraints Promoters Eriksson (2003)
Factors and processes of evolutionary change • Natural selection • Genetic drift • Mutation • Gene flow • Mating system and recombination • Phenotypic plasticity
Change of survival, % 20 1 0 Norm of reaction 0 Phenotypic plasticity –10 –20 –30 +3 +2 +1 0 –1 –2 –3 –4 –5 northwards southwards Latitudinal transfer Phenotypic plasticity Eriksson (2003)
Indicators of change Indicator taxa: • Utility value or known ecological significance • Existence value, for species under threat of extinction • Value for species known to be paradigms of a large class of species Indicators of genetic variation: • Easy to implement, based on good experimental design, indicate processes and flows, give early warnings, have clear objectives • Application of population genetics – conservation of the processes that maintain current genetic variation Namkoong et al. (2002); McKenney et al. (1994)
Indicators of change 1. Number of sub-specific taxa 2. Population size and physical location 3. Environmental amplitude of populations 4. Genetic diversity at marker loci within individuals and populations 5. Quantitative genetic variation 6. Inter-population genetic structure 7. Mating system Brown et al. (1997)
Indicators of change Criterion: Conservation of the processes that maintain genetic variation • Levels of genetic variation • Directional change in gene or genotype frequencies • Gene migration between populations • Reproductive processes/ mating system Namkoong et al. (2002)
Gene flow Raybould et al. (1996)
Genetic erosion “The loss of genetic diversity, in a particular location and over a particular period of time, including the loss of individual genes (alleles), and the loss of particular combinations of genes such as those manifested in landraces or varieties. It is thus a function of change of genetic diversity over time.” FAO (GDEV paper prepared for 9th Session of CGRFA, 2002)
Genetic pollution • Exotic species (crops, forages and forest trees) • Artificial hybrids (Populus, Brassica napus) • Exotic provenances (crops, forages and forest trees) • Artificially selected plants (mainly forest trees and forages) • GMOs (mainly crops such as cotton, maize, Brassica, soybean relatives) Potts et al. (2001)
Pollution – why does it matter? • Loss or disruption of adaptive gene complexes • Introduction of “domestication genes” and therefore loss of natural survival capacities • Increase of susceptibility to pests • Loss of out-breeding characteristics (thus inbreeding depression) • Vigor loss in hybrids • Increase in weedy habit
Genetically modified organisms • Vigor and likelihood of out-crossing (e.g. through spread of crop to new areas) • The genes themselves – herbicide resistance, pest resistance • Disruption of pollinator and plant communities
Transgene escape • Plant containing it persists after harvesting in an agricultural or disturbed habitat or invades a natural habitat • Transgene is transferred by pollination to another crop which persists in an agricultural, disturbed or natural habitat • Transgene is transferred by pollination to a related wild plant which persists in agricultural habitats, disturbed habitats or natural habitats Raybould and Gray (1993)
Potential indicators • Existence of crop wild relatives in area (numbers and relationships) • Viability and fertility of progeny • Breeding system and extent of synchrony of flowering; presence of pollinators • Extent to which subsequent generations can remain fertile and backcross • Migration selection balance for transgene Gepts and Papa (2003)
Conclusions • Sufficient genetic variation within species • Criteria and indicators: baseline data to show trends • Important measurements, methods • Early warning • Trans-national monitoring and policy advice