With populations growing rapidly, particularly in Asia and the Pacific, farmers and scientists are all the more drawing on the benefits of using irradiation to develop new crop varieties and meet farmers’ needs: higher, stable yields and high-quality plants that can resist disease and climate change.
An initiative led by the IAEA and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is bringing together experts from across the region to support one another and build on each other’s research, breeding and cultivation results.
“Mutation breeding accounts for almost 2000 recorded crop varieties in the Asia Pacific region,” said Sobhana Sivasankar, Head of the Plant Breeding and Genetics Section of the Joint FAO/IAEA Programme of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture. “The Plant Mutation Breeding Network aims to build on this success and expand the excellent results already achieved.”
Of the 826 rice varieties released so far using mutagenesis techniques to date, 699 originate from the Asia-Pacific region, including 290 from China alone. The second most widely used wheat variety in China, planted over 3.6 million hectares, was developed using mutation breeding. For more on the contribution of nuclear techniques to China’s agriculture sector, read this article.
The Plant Mutation Breeding Network, or MBN, aims to improve efficiencies in crop mutation breeding across the region. This goes from accelerating the discovery of better traits in plants, to advancing speed-breeding technologies to get improved traits and facilitating farmers’ access to the improved seeds. “The ultimate goal is to ensure food and nutrition security and improve livelihoods through regional cooperation and knowledge and technology exchange,” Sivasankar said. “And our experts stand ready to facilitate and foster that exchange.”