72 research outputs found
Combining interactive GIS tools and expert knowledge in validation of tree species models
Poster presented at XIII Congreso Forestal Mundial. FAO, Buenos Aires (Argentina). 18-25 Oct 200
Geographic analysis for supporting conservation strategies of crop wild relatives. Thesis (Ph.D.)
Crop wild relatives are important for agriculture due to the genetic richness they possess.
They have been used in plant breeding to develop high yielding varieties; varieties with improved resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses, and enhanced nutritional content. Securing their conservation in the long-term is critical to enable the continuous development of crops’ varieties able to respond to future challenges. The work presented in this thesis is a contribution to the effort of understanding the ex situ conservation gaps of crop wild relatives, their expected response to climate change and their needs for conservation. Methods used in this thesis include species distribution modelling, gap analyses, a case study assessing the preliminary IUCN Red List categories, species distribution projections onto future climate change scenarios, and an estimation of the global value of crop wild relatives based on their likelihood of being used in plant breeding, and the contributions of their associated crops to human diets and agricultural production systems. The methods used here can be applied to more crop gene pools for global conservation planning, and can also be adapted for analysis at the regional and national level.
The results presented here are being used to improve the conservation of the wild relatives of 29 crops
To be drought tolerant beans should be aficionados of golfing
Poster presented at Knowledge Sharing Week, CIAT, Cali (Colombia), 18-22 May 200
Tree genetic resources at risk in South America: A spatial threat assessment to prioritize populations for conservation
Background
Humans threat the populations of tree species by overexploitation, deforestation, land use change, and climate change. We present a novel threat assessment at intraspecific level to support the conservation of genetic resources of 80 socioeconomically viable tree species in South America. In this assessment, we evaluate the threat status of Ecogeographic Range Segments (ERSs). ERSs are groups of populations of a specific species in a certain ecological zone of a particular grid cell of a species’ geographic occupancy.
Methods
We used species location records to determine the species distributions and species‐specific ERSs. We distinguished eight threat situations to assess the risk of extirpation of the ERSs of all 80 species. These threat situations were determined by large or little tree cover, low or high human pressure, and low or high climate change impact. Available layers of tree cover and threats were used to determine the levels of fragmentation and direct human pressure. Maxent niche modelling with two Global Circulation Models helped determining climate change impact by the 2050s.
Results
When all 80 species are considered, in total, 59% of the ERSs are threatened by little tree cover or high human pressure. When climate change is also considered, then 71‐73% of the ERSs are threatened. When an increased risk of extirpation of populations outside protected areas is considered, then 84–86% of the ERSs are threatened. Seven species warrant special attention because all their ERSs are threatened across their whole distribution in South America: Balfourondendron riedelianum, Cariniana legalis, Dalbergia nigra, Handroanthus pulcherrimus, Pachira quintana, Prosopis flexuosa, and Prosopis pallida.
Conclusions
Our results confirm the urgency to set up a regional action plan for the conservation of tree genetic resources in South America. With this threat assessment, we aim to support governments and organizations who are taking up this task
Recursos fitogenéticos: bases para un futuro resiliente al clima y libre de hambre en el Caribe
En toda la región Caribe, el cambio climático no solamente planteará desafíos sino también una amplia gama
de oportunidades, que ofrecen mayor importancia a la riqueza de recursos fitogenéticos de la región.
Materializar el potencial de estos recursos para contribuir a garantizar la seguridad alimentaria y crear sistemas
agrícolas más resilientes frente al cambio climático requerirá de una mayor cooperación regional. Los objetivos
centrales de esta cooperación deberán ser: desarrollar intervenciones oportunas en las fronteras nacionales que
mejoren la colecta, conservación y el intercambio de los recursos fitogenéticos
Plant genetic resources: foundations for a food-secure and climate-resilient future in the Caribbean
Across the Caribbean, climate change will bring about not only challenges but also a wide array of opportunities, which lend greater significance to the region’s wealth of plant genetic resources. Realizing the potential of those resources to help ensure food security and build more-resilient agricultural systems in the face of climate change will require stronger regional cooperation. Its central aims should be to develop timely interventions across national borders that improve the collection, conservation, and sharing of plant genetic resources
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