introduction to the global crop diversity trust

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Presentation to Tunisian national genebank

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The Global Crop Diversity Trust: a Foundation for Food Security

What is the Trust ?

Independent international organization established by FAO and CGIAR Centres

• Established in October 2004

• Secretariat in Bonn from January 2013

Endowment to secure long-term funding for global system

• Complementary short-term project funding to overcome

key constraints

Policy framework of International Treaty on PGRFA

• Element of the funding strategy of the Treaty

• Priority for crops under Annex 1, collections in Article 15

Governed by Executive Board

• Treaty GB, Donors Council, FAO, CGIAR

International collections

Goal“to advance an efficient and sustainable global system of ex situ conservation by

promoting the rescue, understanding, use and long-term conservation of valuable

plant genetic resources”

Building and sustaining the Global System

Image by:Neil Palmer/CIAT

Ex situ conservation

Over 1,700 facilities

Holding 7.4m accessions

Vital resource for breeding

Safety duplication

Long-term collection

On-farm management

Breeding/ Working collection

The “Global System” we have now

Conservation

Use

Distribution

Global back-up

Safety duplicate collection

Long-term international collection

National collection

Breeding/Working collection

On-farm management

The “Global System” we need

Conservation

Use

National genebanks have intimate knowledge of indigenous experience and wisdom, local conditions and needs

• search out, acquire, screen, develop, store and distribute diversity of particular and current relevance to country

International genebanks conserve and make available diversity over the long-term

Global back-up – Svalbard Global Seed Vault

Enabling environment – the Treaty

Towards a truly global system

www.croptrust.org

Trust activities

Regeneration Conservation research Evaluation

Permanent backupDuplicationInformation systems

Wheat

78,375 regenerated

3,675 put in vitro

12,255 not viable

Regeneration

Safety duplication

32,917 accessions

43 countries

117 wheat, 615 barleyMongolia, Nepal, Belarus & Armenia

365 ChickpeaGeorgia & Pakistan

215 faba beanGeorgia & Ecuador

157 grasspeaNepal & Pakistan

620 lentilNepal, Georgia & Pakistan

Shipping samples

7 shipments in 1,340 accessions destroyed or returned

many still in quarantine

774,601 accessions stored in Svalbard

Phillippine National Genebank Typhoon Xangsane, 2006

Inside the vault

Photos International Rice Research Institute (IRRI); Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice). 2009.

43 projects

59 collections

20 crops

143 traits

58 NARS

8 CGIAR

43 countries

Evaluation

Promoting use: Information systems

Image by:Neil Palmer/CIAT

Information systems

• Online portal to accession-level information on the world’s genebank holdings

• Initially developed as investment from GCDT, Bioversity, and ITPGRFA-Secretariat

• Initially encompasses CGIAR/held International Collections, Eurisco and USDA

• Searchable on passport, characterization, evaluation and ecogeographic descriptors

• Plans for further development and improvement

• Expandable to include all genebanks!

http://www.genesys-pgr.org

Global information portal

• An information management system for genebanks• The new incarnation of USDA’s Genetic Resources Information

System (GRIN)• “Open source” software for continued development and

maintenance by the user community

In Trust for the International CommunityPlan and Partnership for Managing and Sustaining CGIAR – held

collections of Plant Genetic Resources

Image by:Neil Palmer/CIAT

Objective

To conserve the diversity of PGR in CGIAR-held collections, to make it available to breeders and researchers in a manner that meets high international scientific standards, is cost efficient, is secure, reliable and sustainable over the long-term and is supportive of and consistent with ITPGRFA

International collections

Accessions

AfricaRice Rice 20,000

Bioversity Banana 1,298

CIAT Beans, Cassava, Tropical forages 65,635

CIMMYT Maize, Wheat 155,129

CIPPotato, Sweet potato, Andean Roots

& Tubers16,495

ICARDAGrain legumes, Wheat, Barley,

Forage & range crops134,160

ICRAF Trees 5,144

ICRISAT Dryland cereals, Grain legumes 156,313

IITACowpea, Cassava, Yam, Banana,

Misc legumes28,286

ILRI Tropical forages 18,291

IRRI Rice 110,817

Total 711,568

International collections

CGIAR Research Program for Managing and Sustaining Crop Collections

11 Centres

5 year funding plan

$20 million/year

Routine operations

Trust management and oversight

Commitment by donors to transition to funding through Trust endowment

Transition to sustainable funding

Online reporting tool

Safe-guarding threatened diversity and promoting use:Collecting, protecting and preparing crop wild relatives

Image by:Neil Palmer/CIAT

But why CWR?

Hoisington et al 1998

Folke 2001

The Trust’s CWR initiative

• Identify, collect, conserve, document and use key crop wild relative diversity for climate change adaptation (in developing countries)

• $50 million over 10 years pledged by Norwegian government, starting 2011

• 26 target crops

Species Common nameAvena sativa OatCajanus cajan PigeonpealCicer arietinum ChickpeaDaucus carota CarrotEleusine coracana Finger milletHelianthus annuus SunflowerHordeum vulgare BarleyIpomoea batatas Sweet potatoLathyrus sativus Grass pea/Common chicklingLens culinaris LentilMalus domestica AppleMedicago sativa Alfalfa/LucerneMusa acuminata Cavendish bananaMusa balbisiana Guangdong plantain

Species Common nameOryza glaberrima African riceOryza sativa RicePennisetum glaucum Pearl milletPhaseolus lunatus Butter bean/Lima beanPhaseolus vulgaris Garden beanPisum sativum Garden peaSecale cereale RyeSolanum melongena Eggplant/AubergineSolanum tuberosum PotatoSorghum bicolor SorghumTriticum aestivum Bread wheatVicia faba Faba beanVicia sativa Common vetchVigna subterranea Bambara groundnutVigna unguiculata Cowpea

Crop wild relatives initiative

Gap analysis: carrot

Gap analysis: carrot

www.croptrust.org

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