
Wheat, like this small plot in Oaxaca State,
has been grown in Mexico for over 500 years. |
Age Old Wheats in the New World of Plant Breeding
In Mexico, the wheat of the conquistadors helps
scientists in their battle against drought.
Wheat first came to the Western hemisphere with the
arrival of the Spanish conquistadors about 500 years ago. Since
then, generations of Mexican farmers have tended their wheat fields
with traditional varieties that differ little from their forebears
by virtue of wheat’s self-pollinating nature. Today, these
time-tested wheats represent a new source of genetic diversity that
could improve yields in drought-ridden areas by as much as 30 percent.
CIMMYT scientists and their Mexican collaborators
have gathered thousands of traditional wheat varieties, called landraces,
from diverse locations in Mexico. Farmer and natural selection over
five centuries have combined to screen these wheats for drought
tolerance under often severe conditions. Researchers are looking
to capture the drought adaptive traits of these hearty old-timers
and breed them into modern, higher yielding varieties. Of the original
2,100 varietal samples collected, nine are very promising.
“What we found was that the best of these landraces
show considerably higher expression for certain drought and heat
adaptive traits than common wheat,” says CIMMYT wheat physiologist
Matthew Reynolds. “Heat and drought stress often go hand in
hand. Hot conditions exacerbate drought by evaporating more moisture
from the soil, and when plants are dry their temperature rises.
But with these traits, we might be able to increase the potential
for yield under drought.” Drought plagues more than half of
the wheat area in the developing world and so is a high priority
for CIMMYT’s Rainfed Wheat Program.
CIMMYT physiologist Matthew Reynolds
(left) and colleague Bent Scovmand examine wheat landraces
at CIMMYT’s El Batan station. |
There is a range of traits that can help wheat plants
cope with dry conditions. Early in the season, many of the landraces
showed an increased ability to accumulate carbohydrates in their
stem, reserves that can be used later when the season gets drier
for grain growth or to send roots deeper into the soil in search
of water. A vigorous and rapidly growing leaf canopy can shade surrounding
soil from the sun’s drying rays, thereby conserving soil moisture.
Under stress conditions, the wheat spike can contribute to photosynthesis,
which in turn promotes better development of the grain. While all
of wheat’s organs can play an important role in producing
grain in the face of drought, the root system is probably the most
vital.
At a depth of 60-90cm below the soil, landraces had
a more extensive root system and thus were able to extract more
water out of the soil than common wheat. Not only did the landraces
find more water, but they also used it more efficiently. “We
found an association in these landraces between increased yield
and root length density,” Reynolds says. Where there is a
more extensive root system, the wheat is able to draw more water
and nutrients out of the soil, increasing grain. Tallied up, the
potential yield gain from these landraces may be considerable for
farmers in dry areas.
“The next step is introducing these traits into
the CIMMYT wheat breeding program,” says Reynolds. “Breeding
and physiology work very closely to translate new information like
this into useful products as quickly as possible by combining new
drought adaptive traits with other traits such as disease resistance,
good height, and time to maturity.”
For further information, contact Matthew Reynolds
(m.reynolds@cgiar.org).
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