Rome, Italy
July 24, 2007
The biotechnology tool of marker-assisted selection
(MAS) has raised high expectations for increasing
genetic progress through breeding. Some experts have
even argued that the application of MAS could
“revolutionize” the way varieties and breeding stock are
developed.
In
a new comprehensive assessment (Marker-Assisted
Selection, Rome 2007), FAO emphasizes that MAS has
enormous potential but notes that the technology has not
yet delivered its expected benefits to farmers in
developing countries. Shivaji Pandey, Chairperson of the
FAO Working Group on Biotechnology, gives his view on
MAS.
What is marker-assisted selection (MAS)?
MAS is a biotechnology tool that could greatly
accelerate conventional breeding of crops, livestock,
farmed fish and trees. Scientists are using MAS to
genetically improve certain characteristics or traits
(productivity, disease resistance, quality etc.) that
are important for farmers. MAS makes it possible to
select traits with greater accuracy and to develop a new
variety quicker than in the past.
What is the difference between MAS and genetically
modified organisms (GMOs)?
MAS and genetic modification are different
biotechnologies. MAS allows desirable genes to be
"marked" or tagged so they can be selected within the
breeding population, while GMOs are the result of the
transfer of a desirable gene or genes from one species
to another.
New plant varieties or improved animal breeds resulting
from MAS do not require a specific legislative
framework. The complicated approval process required for
GMOs does not apply for MAS - its costs of release are
therefore lower.
In addition, the technology is not controversial so
there is no problem with public acceptance. Indeed, one
of the drawbacks of the intense debate that has taken
place in recent years over the benefits and risks of
GMOs is that it has overshadowed the potential role that
other, non-GMO, biotechnologies, such as MAS, may play
for food and agriculture.
What is the potential of MAS?
Since MAS first became a practical reality about 20
years ago, it has now gone past the research and
development stage and is being applied in the field. For
example, it is currently being used in dairy cattle
breeding programmes in France and Germany, and rice
varieties with improved bacterial blight resistance have
being developed using MAS approaches and released in
India and Indonesia.
However, initial enthusiasm and optimism have been
tempered by the realization that it is more difficult
and takes longer than originally thought before genetic
improvement of traits using MAS can be realized. The
considerable resources invested in this technology have
been mainly concentrated in the industrialized world,
and MAS has not yet delivered its expected benefits to
farmers in developing countries.
What are the costs associated with MAS?
MAS requires quite a sophisticated infrastructure and
considerable investments: including specialized
equipment, electricity, laboratory design and
management, data handling and statistics, and Internet
connectivity. Efficient and effective application of MAS
also requires well-qualified staff and good funding. It
should therefore be used where there is a clear
advantage over traditional selection techniques.
What are the constraints countries are facing
applying MAS?
Apart from the investments required, a serious
constraint that most countries face in applying MAS is
the lack of a national policy on science and technology
and on biotechnology. This is essential to provide
guidance on the strategic planning, monitoring and
evaluation of biotechnologies, including MAS, for food
and agriculture. In addition, MAS should only be applied
when well-structured breeding programmes are already in
place, which is often not the case in many developing
countries.
How could the application of MAS contribute to hunger
and poverty reduction?
Most of the around 820 million hungry people in
developing countries live in rural areas where people’s
livelihoods depend on agriculture. This means that
investing in agriculture, and more broadly in rural
development, must be at the heart of any strategy for
hunger and poverty reduction. While the measures needed
certainly go well beyond the issue of producing more
food and agricultural products, achieving greater yields
and higher value products from the same plot of land or
enterprise, through, for example, appropriate
application of technologies such as MAS, must be a key
ingredient for the great majority of developing
countries.
RELATED LINK:
Electronic forum on marker-assisted selection (17
November - 14 December, 2003)
RELATED RELEASE:
FAO releases major
new publication on marker-assisted selection
Marker-assisted selection: Current status and future
perspectives in crops, livestock, forestry and fish
Edited by E.P. Guimarães, J. Ruane, B.D. Scherf, A. Sonnino
and J.D. Dargie
Available at
http://www.fao.org/docrep/010/a1120e/a1120e00.htm