Plant breeding has had, and continues to have, an important role in providing farmers with resilient pastures. Early breeding relied on improvement of ecotype populations and this was accelerated by crossing with selected introduced germplasm. The primary traits under selection have targeted speed of establishment, total and/or seasonal dry matter (DM) yield, nutritive value or feed quality, flowering time and reduced aftermath heading, disease resistance, persistence and seed yield. Continued improvement through plant breeding to meet environmental concerns and tolerances to both biotic and abiotic stresses will be achieved through ongoing plant introductions, exploiting heterosis, speed breeding, genomic selection, improvements in phenotyping, metabolomics, improved compatibility with beneficial microbes, and potentially the use of transgenic and gene editing technologies.
History
Rights statement
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Language
English
Does this contain Māori information or data?
No
Publisher
NZ Grassland Association Inc.
Journal title
Grassland Research and Practice Series
ISSN
0118-8581
Citation
Caradus, J., Bouton, J., Brummer, C., Faville, M., George, R., Hume, D., Inch, C., Kerr, G., Montel, S., Stewart, A., & Woodfield, D. (2021). Plant breeding for resilient pastures. Grassland Research and Practice Series, 17, 247–269. https://doi.org/10.33584/rps.17.2021.3441