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Journal article

Developments in breeding cereals for organic agriculture

From

The Organic Research Centre1

Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark2

Wageningen University & Research3

Technical University of Munich4

National Institute for Agronomic Research5

Scotland's Rural College6

Hungarian Academy of Sciences7

Saatzucht Donau GesmbH & Co. KG8

University of Hohenheim9

Bioenergy and Biomass, Biosystems Division, Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark10

Biosystems Division, Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark11

...and 1 more

The need for increased sustainability of performance in cereal varieties, particularly in organic agriculture (OA), is limited by the lack of varieties adapted to organic conditions. Here, the needs for breeding are reviewed in the context of three major marketing types, global, regional, local, in European OA.

Currently, the effort is determined, partly, by the outcomes from trials that compare varieties under OA and CA (conventional agriculture) conditions. The differences are sufficiently large and important to warrant an increase in appropriate breeding. The wide range of environments within OA and between years, underlines the need to try to select for specific adaptation in target environments.

The difficulty of doing so can be helped by decentralised breeding with farmer participation and the use of crops buffered by variety mixtures or populations. Varieties for OA need efficient nutrient uptake and use and weed competition. These and other characters need to be considered in relation to the OA cropping system over the whole rotation.

Positive interactions are needed, such as early crop vigour for nutrient uptake, weed competition and disease resistance. Incorporation of all characteristics into the crop can be helped by diversification within the crop, allowing complementation and compensation among plants. Although the problems of breeding cereals for organic farming systems are large, there is encouraging progress.

This lies in applications of ecology to organic crop production, innovations in plant sciences, and the realisation that such progress is central to both OA and CA, because of climate change and the increasing costs of fossil fuels.

Language: English
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Year: 2008
Pages: 323-346
Journal subtitle: International Journal of Plant Breeding
ISSN: 15735060 and 00142336
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1007/s10681-008-9690-9
ORCIDs: Østergård, Hanne

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