2 results on '"low-input"'
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2. Developments in breeding cereals for organic agriculture
- Author
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Dominique Desclaux, Hanne Østergård, Isabelle Goldringer, S. P. Hoad, F. Löschenberger, Jörg Peter Baresel, Géza Kovács, Thomas Miedaner, Martin Wolfe, E. Lammerts Van Bueren, The Organic Research Centre (ORC), Technische Universität Munchen - Université Technique de Munich [Munich, Allemagne] (TUM), Diversité et adaptation des plantes cultivées (UMR DIAPC), Université Montpellier 2 - Sciences et Techniques (UM2)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad), Génétique Quantitative et Evolution - Le Moulon (Génétique Végétale) (GQE-Le Moulon), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-AgroParisTech-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Scottish Agricultural College, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA), Saatzucht Donau GesmbH and CoKG, University of Hohenheim, Plant Breeding, and Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] (WUR)
- Subjects
[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences ,0106 biological sciences ,winter-wheat ,adaptation ,Plant Science ,01 natural sciences ,wheat triticum-aestivum ,DIRECT AND INDIRECT SELECTION VARIETY TESTING ,PARTICIPATORY PLANT BREEDING WIDE AND SPECIFIC ADAPTATION CROP DIVERSITY ,ORGANIC AGRICULTURE ,ECOLOGIE ,bilan énergétique ,céréale ,agriculture biologique ,Laboratorium voor Plantenveredeling ,arthrose ,Cropping system ,2. Zero hunger ,changement climatique ,variété ,Agroforestry ,food and beverages ,Breeding, genetics and propagation ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,PE&RC ,environnement ,rotation culturale ,Agricultural sciences ,Organic farming ,genetic-variation ,sélection végétale ,résistance aux maladies ,competitive ability ,Context (language use) ,Horticulture ,Diversification (marketing strategy) ,Biology ,blé ,low-input ,Genetics ,grande culture ,farming systems ,grain-yield ,lolium-rigidum ,business.industry ,fungi ,15. Life on land ,culture ,Biotechnology ,Plant Breeding ,Crop diversity ,Agriculture ,Food security, food quality and human health ,dry-matter ,quantitative trait loci ,Sustainability ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,business ,Weed ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Sciences agricoles ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Correspondance: wolfe@wakelyns.demon.co.uk; International audience; 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
- Published
- 2008
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