Reprint

Recent Advances in Genetics and Breeding of Major Staple Food Crops

Edited by
July 2021
314 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-0976-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-0977-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Recent Advances in Genetics and Breeding of Major Staple Food Crops that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Summary
To meet the global food demand of an increasing population, food production has to be increased by 60% by 2050. The main production constraints, such as climate change, biotic stresses, abiotic stresses, soil nutrition deficiency problems, problematic soils, etc., have to be addressed on an urgent basis. More than 50% of human calories are from three major cereals: rice, wheat, and maize. The harnessing of genetic diversity by novel allele mining assisted by recent advances in biotechnological and bioinformatics tools will enhance the utilization of the hidden treasures in the gene bank. Technological advances in plant breeding will provide some solutions for the biofortification, stress resistance, yield potential, and quality improvement in staple crops. The elucidation of the genetic, physiological, and molecular basis of useful traits and the improvement of the improved donors containing multiple traits are key activities for variety development. High-throughput genotyping systems assisted by bioinformatics and data science provide efficient and easy tools for geneticists and breeders. Recently, new breeding techniques applied in some food crops have become game-changers in the global food crop market. With this background, we invited 18 eminent researchers working on food crops from across the world to contribute their high-quality original research manuscripts. The research studies covered modern food crop genetics and breeding.
Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
dry direct-seeded rice; early vigor; QTL; candidate gene; phenotyping; EMS; MutMap; mutagenesis; CLE7; tropical maize; fasciation; mapping; radish; microspore culture; regeneration rate; outcrossing; two-way pseudo-testcross model; Oryza sativa L.; PPDK; flo4-5; floury endosperm; rice; allelopathy; QTL; rice; yield; HYV; Tongil; indica; japonica; SNP; molecular breeding; wheat quality; wheat milling; wheat hardness; puroindolines; water absorption capacity; crop genetics; Solanum tuberosum; abiotic stress; phenylpropanoids; essential amino acid; transcriptome; small RNA; comparative genomics; nutrition; rice; days to heading; QTL; Hd1; Ghd7; Hd16; rice; chromosome segment substitution lines (CSSLs); quantitative trait locus (QTL); marker-assisted selection (MAS); cold tolerance (CT); gene editing; mutagenesis; genetically modified; genetically modified organism (GMO); crop breeding; ribonucleoprotein complex (RNP); genetic screening; landraces; genetic diversity; population structure; West Africa; maize improvement; DArTseq markers; co-expression network; drought-tolerant-yield; reproductive-stage drought; qDTYs; rice; transcriptomics; watermelon; pentatricopeptide-repeat (PPR) gene family; comprehensive analysis; expression profiling; flesh color; canola; Brassica napus; genetics; gene technology; genomics; disease resistance; CSSLs; drought stress; ‘KDML105’ rice; co-expression network; low-temperature germinability; rice; interspecific cross; QTL; interaction; peanut; core collection; genetic diversity; population structure; genome-wide association study; linkage disequilibrium