Mesoamerica’s Crop Wild Relatives: A new approach for conservation planning

Crop wild relatives (CWR) are wild plants that are the ancestors of important crops for human well-being. CWR hold genetic diversity that can be vital for plant breeding programs and the sustainability of agriculture, particularly given global change. Conservation of CWR genetic diversity thus has b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 2019-08, Vol.3
Hauptverfasser: Tobón, Wolke, Urquiza-Haas, Tania, Mastretta Yanes, Alicia, Cuervo Robayo, Angela, Orjuela Restrepo, María, Urquiza-Haas, Esmeralda, Alarcón, Jesús, Oliveros, Oswaldo, Acevedo, Francisca, Goettsch, Bárbara, Koleff Osorio, Patricia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Crop wild relatives (CWR) are wild plants that are the ancestors of important crops for human well-being. CWR hold genetic diversity that can be vital for plant breeding programs and the sustainability of agriculture, particularly given global change. Conservation of CWR genetic diversity thus has become a global food security issue, and several countries are actively developing conservation strategies including the generation of a national checklist and inventory of CWR, the assessment of current threat status, the identification of knowledge and conservation, and the establishment of genetic reserves. In this context, Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador, in collaboration with experts abroad (University of Birmingham, UK, and IUCN), are working together in a project to contribute towards safeguarding Mesoamerican CWR (http://www.psmesoamerica.org/en/). One important step is to identify CWR conservation area networks framed within the systematic conservation planning approach. However, genetic diversity is generally not addressed during the planning process. As it is unfeasible to sample and perform genetic analyses of hundreds of species due to limited timeframes and conservation budgets, we propose a novel approach to overcome the lack of genetic data. We used two criteria to develop proxies for genetic diversity (PGD): environmental variability, as given by climate, soil and topographic spatially-defined variables; and historic differentiation, as shown by phylogeographic patterns found in other species of the same habitat and region. environmental variability, as given by climate, soil and topographic spatially-defined variables; and historic differentiation, as shown by phylogeographic patterns found in other species of the same habitat and region. We tested our approach by using genomic data from an empirical study of maize wild relatives distributed in Mexico. By combining species distribution models of 120 Mesoamerican CWR taxa and 102 PGD, we delimited areas of potential population differentiation. Furthermore, we considered each taxon's IUCN Red List category and habitat preference, assessed by experts during the project, to determine areas for CWR conservation in Mexico, using the Zonation conservation planning tool. Areas identified as important for CWR in situ conservation are located within sites of high cultural diversity and in areas where agriculture originated and traditional agriculture is ongoing. Also, our study design maximizes the rep
ISSN:2535-0897
2535-0897
DOI:10.3897/biss.3.38286