El Batán, Mexico
November, 2005
Source:
CIMMYT E-News, vol 2 no.
11, November 2005
Grigoriy Sereda (left)
with CIMMYT’s Alex Morgounov, colleagues in the
important work through KASIB. |
Grigoriy Sereda,
Head of the Breeding Department at the Central Kazakhstan
Agricultural Research Center, is nothing if not direct. “The
future of our breeding program relies on KASIB. Without it,
germplasm exchange would be nonexistent. And without germplasm
exchange, crop breeding cannot move forward.”
KASIB, the
Kazakhstan-Siberia Network for Spring Wheat Improvement, was
established in 2000 as the brainchild of CIMMYT regional
representative Alexei
Morgounov. In the former Soviet Union, there was
considerable seed exchange among the republics and interactions
among breeders and crop research institutes. But after the
break-up of the U.S.S.R., many scientists found themselves
isolated professionally and with little access to breeding lines
from outside sources. Through KASIB, CIMMYT, with modest funding
from GTZ, a German development agency, and the International
Cooperation for Agricultural Research in Central Asia and the
Caucasus, endeavored to rectify the situation.
The principles of
the network are simple: participants share breeding lines and
data and abide by a Wheat Workers Code of Ethics (a declaration
by the U.S. National Wheat Improvement Committee). Aside from
active exchange and evaluation of experimental lines, the
network publishes trial results and proceedings from an annual
meeting where scientists from participating institutions present
and discuss their work.
Each of the 17
participating institutions submits 2-4 recent varieties or
breeding lines to CIMMYT’s Kazakhstan office, where seed for the
trials and the field books are prepared and distributed to
cooperators in April, prior to planting. The trials are grown at
the diverse sites with three replications. Data from trials are
submitted to CIMMYT, where they are summarized, published in
Russian and English, and distributed to cooperators and others.
The trials are a key source of lines and varieties carrying
important traits such as drought tolerance, disease resistance
(primarily to leaf rust and septoria leaf blotch), and improved
grain quality.
Scientists from the
Kazakhstan Institute of Plant Protection screen
materials provided by KASIB, CIMMYT, and others against
leaf rust and other destructive wheat diseases, and
report their findings back to breeders in the network. |
Illustrating the
point, in 2000 northern Kazakhstan and Siberia suffered a leaf
rust outbreak, Morgounov recounts. None of the 80 modern
varieties and lines being tested showed resistance to the
pathogen. This clearly indicated a pressing need for the
breeders to address, and one for which CIMMYT was well equipped
to assist.
Another facet of
KASIB is an innovative shuttle breeding program between the
network and CIMMYT-Mexico. Following several years of trials,
says CIMMYT wheat breeder Richard Trethowan, scientists in the
network select elite local lines and varieties with promising
agronomic or quality traits and send seed to Mexico to be
crossed with CIMMYT materials that possess leaf rust resistance
and other locally-desirable traits, such as a tall profile and
photoperiod sensitivity. The lines are crossed with a Kazakh
parent or to another Kazakh or Canadian line and returned to
Kazakhstan and Siberia for additional breeding to ensure
adaptation to local environments.
Once adapted,
Trethowen continues, the line can then be sent back to Mexico
for further crossing and improvement, hence the term shuttle.
The system not only allows incorporation of traits not found in
the region’s wheat, but accelerates breeding by allowing
multiple cycles per year. The first full cycle of the shuttle
was completed in 2004, with the first advanced lines reaching
Mexico. Trethowen credits KASIB for enabling the approach to be
applied in Central Asia and for benefits that accrue to CIMMYT
wheat research through the added genetic diversity introduced
from Kazakh and Siberian lines—diversity that may well serve
farmers elsewhere in the developing world.
For Sereda, KASIB
has breathed fresh life into his work: for example, he has
received more than 200 entries to plant through the network and
has selected about 60 for crosses. He is particularly enthused
about the experimental wheats from CIMMYT’s wide-cross
research—derived from crosses with wild relatives of
wheat—received through the KASIB-CIMMYT shuttle. After 35 years
of plant breeding, the wide-cross collection brings an entirely
new tool on which to focus his vast experience. And he thanks
KASIB meetings and publications for providing a forum to share
his knowledge and more quickly move improved wheats to the
farmers of Kazakhstan. |