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Integrating Physiological and Genetic Approaches for Improving Drought Tolerance in Crops

Authors :
Alvina Gul Kazi
Hassan Sher
Ahmad Ali
Abdul Mujeeb-Kazi
Riffat Naseem Malik
Zeshan Ali
Umar Masood Quraishi
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2014.

Abstract

The linked projections of the global population standing in 2050 of approximately 9.2 billion and the balanced annual increase in crop yields to ensure food security, with wheat considered as its major conduit have necessitated taking a careful multidisciplinary integrated look at what looms ahead. Keeping wheat as the major crop target, its outputs under irrigated and rain-fed conditions have become significant to address factors that pave the way for yield maximization both under plant improvement and plant management scenarios. Optimum experimental condition yields and realized national annual yields show tremendous gaps, and when farmers with smaller land holdings are involved, this gap is further broadened. In this chapter, we address yield discrepancies, focusing on drought due to three major factors present now and that may magnify in the future; this suggests the need to embrace all as working objectives in a tandem manner and in a holistic fashion. The genetic component has a pivotal slot that encompasses breeding for high yield per se and, where such genetic resource diversity is limiting, to explore the various wheat gene pools and harness the same. This option may permit researchers to capture the diversity of genetic resources that have so far been underutilized over an expanse that covers intraspecific, interspecific, and intergeneric hybridization. The working expanse addresses both biotic and abiotic stress production constraints and allows more precise handling of crop improvement around water-limiting conditions. Intervention using current molecular advances is a boon to swift progress. As with the exploitation of genomic diversity in prebreeding and breeding programs, the current setup may show the way forward to rely on genotypic platforms through accurate phenotypic information, thereby permitting stringent and reliable information for maximizing yields and other attributes essential for crop production to be gathered. This is where the various “omic” areas stand to efficiently support diverse research targets. Finally, it is paramount that water availability be seriously kept in focus. Timely natural supplies are risky, optimum availability for irrigating crops is showing less reliability, and water scarcity is acutely apparent; in addition, it is expected to become a major concern in the very near decades due to climate change and source supply shortages. Therefore alternatives for water provision are gaining importance coupled with the introduction of efficient management application systems. These interlinked facets form the contents of this chapter.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8c4975e1d6547627b66443baafa30a8e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-800875-1.00014-4