Title: Workpackage 6 Product Exploitation and Dissemination
1(No Transcript)
2Ex situ germplasm users the in situ and
ecosystem conservation communities
- Nigel Maxted and Shelagh Kell
- University of Birmingham, UK
3Introduction
- Ex situ germplasm for in situ conservation a new
role? - Genetic conservation is explicitly utilitarian
- There is an intimate link between conservation
and use - Plant
- Genetic Conservation Utilisation
- Diversity
4PGR value to society
- Many values can be assigned to PGR in addition to
socioeconomic use. These include - Genetic or taxonomic distinction
- Rarity
- Threat status
- Aesthetic or recreational value
- Cultural importance
- Flagship species
- Higher value Higher conservation priority
Higher utilisation potential - Beware of crude valuation!
5Use of gene bank conserved germplasm
- Primary use Direct use e.g.
- Plant breeding
- Pharmaceuticals
- Recreation
- Secondary use Indirect use e.g.
- Characterisation and evaluation
- Research
6Primary use categories
- Food Food Additives
- Animal Food Bee Plants
- Invertebrate Food Materials
- Fuels Social Uses
- Vertebrate Poisons Non-Vertebrate Poisons
- Medicines Environmental Uses
- Gene Sources Recreational Uses
7Fundamental requirements of ex situ germplasm
holdings for use
- Passport descriptors (IPGRI, 1997)
- These provide the basic information used for
the general management of the accession
(including the registration at the gene bank and
other identification information) and describe
parameters that should be observed when the
accession is originally collected. - Characterisation descriptors (IPGRI, 1997)
- These enable an easy and quick discrimination
between phenotypes. They are generally highly
heritable, can be easily seen by the eye and are
equally expressed in all environments. In
addition, these may include a limited number of
additional traits desirable by a consensus of
users of the particular crop. - Evaluation descriptors (IPGRI, 1997)
- Many of these descriptors in this category are
susceptible to environmental differences but are
generally useful in crop improvement and others
may involve complex biochemical or molecular
characterization. They include yield, agronomic
performance, stress susceptibilities and
biochemical and cytological traits.
8In situ and ecosystem conservation
- Biodiversity
- Ecosystem diversity
- Species diversity
- Genetic diversity
- In situ definition (CBD, 1992)
- In situ conservation means the conservation of
ecosystems and natural habitats and the
maintenance and recovery of viable populations of
species in their natural surroundings and, in the
case of domesticates or cultivated species, in
the surroundings where they have developed their
distinctive properties.
9In situ techniques
- Genetic reserve conservation
- The location, management and monitoring of
genetic diversity in natural wild populations
within defined areas designated for active,
long-term conservation - On-farm conservation
- The sustainable management of genetic diversity
of locally developed traditional crop varieties
with associated wild and weedy species or forms
by farmers within traditional agricultural,
horticultural or agri-silvicultural cultivation
systems - Home garden conservation
- The sustainable management of genetic diversity
of minor crops, condiments and medicinal plants
that are grown in backyard gardens for home
consumption
10Ecosystem conservation
- Ecosystem conservation
- The maintenance of the diversity of living
organisms, their habitats and the
interrelationships between organisms and their
environment - Circa situ conservation
- The conservation of components of biological
diversity outside their natural habitats but
within managed within traditional systems by
local farmers
11Ex situ conserved germplasm uses in genetic
reserves
- Natural habitat
- Semi-closed ecosystem
- Introduction of exotic material threat to
native sp. - SHOULD NOT USE!
- Few examples of genetic reserve conservation
- But
12Population enrichment
Qal'at Sala Hadeen, Syria
13Reserve population enrichment
- Increasing population size to the minimum viable
population level - Choice of ex situ accessions used to enrich in
situ population - Same taxon as target taxon
- Local provenance to the genetic reserve site
- Homoclinal match with reserve site (climatic,
soils, land use, ecology, topography, spatial
heterogeneity) - Ecogeographic match with reserve site
- Limited examples of procedures for PGRFA
14Ex situ conserved germplasm use in on-farm
conservation
- Artificial habitat
- Semi-open ecosystem
15Ex situ conserved germplasm use in on-farm
conservation
- Artificial habitat
- Semi-open ecosystem
- Dynamic evolution and introduction
- No estimates of how often on-farm material is
enriched - Introduction of exotic material regular
occurrence - Not a serious threat to local diversity
16Participatory Plant Breeding
- Introduce of ex situ germplasm for use in
collaborative breeding programmes between
professional breeders and local farmers
- Avoids replacement of local material with highly
bred varieties - Maintains local diversity
- Involves local communities
17Participatory Plant Breeding
- Introduction of ex situ germplasm for use in
collaborative breeding programmes between
professional breeders and local farmers - Avoids replacement of local material with highly
bred varieties - Maintains local diversity
- Involves local communities
- Choice of ex situ accessions used for PPB
- Carefully scrutiny of passport, characterisation
and evaluation data - Homoclinal match with reserve site
- Ecogeographic match with reserve site
- Is this PPB material in gene banks?
18Participatory Varietal Selection
- Basket of choices Cultivar and land races
grown in provenance trial for local farmers to
select - Avoids complete replacement of local material
with highly bred varieties - Maintains traditional cultivation systems
- Involves local communities
- Choice of ex situ accessions used for PVS
- Carefully scrutiny of passport, characterisation
and evaluation data - Homoclinal match with reserve site
- Ecogeographic match with reserve site
- Is this PVS material in gene banks?
19Land race repatriation
- Local land races lost (e.g. natural disaster or
civil unrest) - Highly bred varieties may not be successful in
marginal environments - Maintains traditional cultivation systems
- Quicker normalisation of agriculture
- Involves local communities
- Choice of ex situ accessions used for
repatriation - Actual or genetically close land race match
- Carefully scrutiny of passport, characterisation
and evaluation data - Homoclinal match with site
- Ecogeographic match with site
- Is this land race material in gene banks?
- Does the close match matter?
20Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in ecosystem
conservation
- Natural habitat
- Semi-closed ecosystem
- Introduction of exotic material threat to
native sp. - SHOULD NOT USE!
- But
21Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in
single-species plant conservation
- Reintroduction / Re-establishment / Reinstatement
/ Restitution - The introduction of an organism into a habitat
in which it was known to exist at some time in
the past - Recovery
- The management of a threatened species to
increase population numbers to a self-sustaining
level - Translocation
- Population relocated to suitable site
- Aims
- Halt population deleterious factors
- Re-establish minimum viable population
22Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in
single-species plant conservation
- Reintroduction Specialist Group of the IUCN
Species Survival Commission - IUCN/SSC Guidelines for Reintroductions (1995)
- Choice of ex situ accessions used for single
species conservation - Carefully scrutiny of passport, characterisation
and evaluation data - Homoclinal match with reserve site
- Ecogeographic match with reserve site
- Is wild plant species material in gene banks?
23Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in habitat
restoration
- Is habitat restoration possible?
24Can a destroyed habitat be replaced?
25Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in habitat
restoration
- Society for Ecological Restoration
- Rehabilitation of degraded habitats e.g.
- Mining spoil tips
- Former quarry sites
- Motorway roadsides
- Brown field urban sites
- Derelict intensive agricultural land
- Logged forest
- CBD Article 8 includes a commitment to
rehabilitate and restore degraded ecosystems
26Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in ecosystem
conservation
- How?
- Plant keystone species
- Encourage other species from
- Surrounding ecosystem
- Remaining habitat fragments not destroyed
- Soil seed bank
- Nurse species
- Complex ecological processes, biotic and abiotic
interrelationships of the site so no equivalence - Problems of provenance and bulking
- Passport, characterisation and evaluation (e.g.
spoil tips) data - Is the required material available in gene banks?
27Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in plant
introduction (mitigation), refuges and species
substitutions
- Ecosystems suffering extreme and rapid changes
- Dams
- Road building
- Urban development project
- No possibility of restoration
- Introduction or translocation of habitat
components
28Ex situ conserved germplasm Use in plant
introduction (mitigation), refuges and species
substitutions
- Simply build new diverse habitat!
- Choice of ex situ material to fit site
- Careful scrutiny of passport, characterisation
and evaluation data - Homoclinal match with reserve site
- Ecogeographic match with reserve site
29Ex situ conserved germplasmLinkage to use
- Museum exhibits non-use (Simmonds, 1961)
- Conservation cost for ex situ gene bank
- 6.1 million accessions in world gene banks (FAO,
1998) - US 870 per sample cost of collecting and placing
in gene bank (Smith Linington, 1997) - US 30.5 million by Hawkes et al. (2000)
- Need to maximise use
30Use of ex situ material in in situ conservation
- Is ex situ conservation doing a good job for in
situ users? - 66 accessions lack basic passport data
- 80 accessions lack characterisation data
- 95 accessions lack evaluation data
- 1 of gene bank accessions are appropriately
catalogued and ready for use (Given 1994 FAO,
1998) - How to improve use of ex situ conserved
germplasm? - EPGRIS and EURISCO are major innovations!
31Potential points of discussion Conservation
planning
- Target taxa breadth include more wild species
- 4 of government funded gene banks
- 14 of CGIAR gene banks accessions (FAO, 1998)
- Target area (sampling) breadth
- Realisation that one or a few accessions of a
wild species does not mean conservation
32Discussion points Field conservation
- Efficient Population Sampling
- Real genetic sample
- Quality Collection of Passport Data
- Sample labelling (expedition identifier,
collector name and number, date, type of
material) - Sample identification (scientific name,
vernacular name) - Sampling information (population estimate -
number of plants in population is , covering
m2, sampling method) - Collecting site location (country, province,
precise location, latitude, longitude, altitude,
farmer's name) - Collecting site description and context (site
disturbance, physiography, soil, biotic factors) - Population information (phenology, pests
diseases, uses) - Conservation planning / gap analysis
33Discussion points Provenance and sourcing of
material
- How local is local? What is the spatial extent of
adaptation? - Population extinctions if locally extinct should
exotic material be used? - Lack of choice if the species is locally extinct
and there is no ex situ material - Genetic contamination on severely degraded sites
what difference does exotic material make?
34Discussion points Quality Collection of
Passport Data
35Discussion points Gene bank conservation
- Collecting Reports and Other Publications
- PGR Newsletter
- Efficient Storage
- Well managed
- Efficient regeneration
- Collection advertising
- Holdings database accessible via the internet or
a meta-database - EURISCO, SINGER
36Discussion points Gene bank conservation
- Characterisation and evaluation
- Cannot leave completely to users build a
relationship with users - Publicise results
- Developing core collection
- Ensure characterisation and evaluation of core
- Quality service to users
- Quick, efficient contact with user community
- Linking Conservation and Utilisation Sites
- Form institutional links with the user community
37Discussion points In situ and ecosystem
conservation
- Genetically variable reintroduction stock
- Research into minimum viable population
- Ex situ raised reintroduction material
- Loss of genetic diversity during bulking
- Use of non-native species
- First step in rehabilitation of a severely
degraded site may be amelioration - Nurse species
- Beware of monocultures and / or invasive
characteristics
38Conclusions
- Need to ensure good efficient conservation and
utilisation - Follow examples of the best practice in gene
banks - Gene bank staff need to expand role
- Need to get out of the bank because not all
material can come from the bank - Rather focus on meeting users demands, more
directed collecting where gene bank act as
intermediary - Follow example of botanic gardens
- Face challenges of CBD In situ gt ex situ
- Re-brand gene banks as plant diversity centres?