DSSS - Back to the future: Using ancient barley landraces for a sustainable future
- Datum: 24.01.2025
- Uhrzeit: 15:00 - 16:00
- Vortragender: Dr. Timothy George
- James Hutton Institute, Dundee
- Ort: NO.002, MPI für Intelligente Systeme
Future
crops need to be sustainable in the face of climate change. Modern barley
varieties have been bred for high productivity and quality; however, they have
suffered considerable genetic erosion, losing crucial genetic diversity. This
renders modern cultivars vulnerable to climate change and stressful
environments. I will highlight the potential to tailor crops to a specific
environment by utilising diversity inherent in an adapted landrace population.
Tapping into natural biodiversity, while incorporating information about local
environmental and climatic conditions, allows targeting of key traits and
genotypes, enabling crop production in marginal soils. An example of this is Bere
which is an ancient barley that was once widely grown in northern Britain,
where its ability to grow on poor soils and under challenging climatic
conditions made it a valuable staple. By the end of the 20th century, Bere had
largely been replaced by higher-yielding modern varieties and only survived in
cultivation on a few Scottish islands. recent revival of Bere, driven by its
use in high-value food and drink products and multidisciplinary research into
its genetics, valuable sustainability traits and potential for developing
resilient barley varieties is an exemplar of our approach. I will conclude by outlining
future directions for the utilisation of genetic resources maintained in
landrace collections to support sustainable agriculture through germplasm
development via the use of genomics technologies and big data.