Speed breeding is a powerful tool to accelerate crop research and breeding

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Author
Watson, Amy
Ghosh, Sreya
Williams, Matthew J.
Cuddy, William S.
Simmonds, James
Rey, María-Dolores
Hinchliffe, Alison
Steed, Andrew
Reynolds, Daniel
Adamski, Nikolai M.
Breakspear, Andy
Korolev, Andrey
Rayner, Tracey
Dixon, Laura E.
Riaz, Adnan
Martin, William
Ryan, Merrill
Edwards, David
Batley, Jacqueline
Raman, Harsh
Carter, Jeremy
Rogers, Christian
Domoney, Claire
Moore, Graham
Harwood, Wendy
Nicholson, Paul
Dieters, Mark J.
DeLacy, Ian H.
Zhou, Ji
Uauy, Cristobal
Boden, Scott A.
Park, Robert F.
Wulff, Brande BH.
Hickey, Lee T.
Publisher
Springer NatureDate
2018Subject
Adult-plant resistanceHexaploid wheat
Bread wheat Mutant
Resource
Strength
Barley
Rust
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Show full item recordAbstract
The growing human population and a changing environment have raised significant concern for global food security, with the current improvement rate of several important crops inadequate to meet future demand1. This slow improvement rate is attributed partly to the long generation times of crop plants. Here, we present a method called ‘speed breeding’, which greatly shortens generation time and accelerates breeding and research programmes. Speed breeding can be used to achieve up to 6 generations per year for spring wheat (Triticum aestivum), durum wheat (T. durum), barley (Hordeum vulgare), chickpea (Cicer arietinum) and pea (Pisum sativum), and 4 generations for canola (Brassica napus), instead of 2–3 under normal glasshouse conditions. We demonstrate that speed breeding in fully enclosed, controlled-environment growth chambers can accelerate plant development for research purposes, including phenotyping of adult plant traits, mutant studies and transformation. The use of supplemental lighting in a glasshouse environment allows rapid generation cycling through single seed descent (SSD) and potential for adaptation to larger-scale crop improvement programs. Cost saving through light-emitting diode (LED) supplemental lighting is also outlined. We envisage great potential for integrating speed breeding with other modern crop breeding technologies, including high-throughput genotyping, genome editing and genomic selection, accelerating the rate of crop improvement.
