Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2067/48265
Title: Breeding progress and preparedness for mass-scale deployment of perennial lignocellulosic biomass crops switchgrass, miscanthus, willow and poplar
Authors: Clifton-Brown, John
Harfouche, Antoine 
Casler, Michael D
Dylan Jones, Huw
Macalpine, William J
Murphy-Bokern, Donal
Smart, Lawrence B
Adler, Anneli
Ashman, Chris
Awty-Carroll, Danny
Bastien, Catherine
Bopper, Sebastian
Botnari, Vasile
Brancourt-Hulmel, Maryse
Chen, Zhiyong
Clark, Lindsay V
Cosentino, Salvatore
Dalton, Sue
Davey, Chris
Dolstra, Oene
Donnison, Iain
Flavell, Richard
Greef, Joerg
Hanley, Steve
Hastings, Astley
Hertzberg, Magnus
Hsu, Tsai-Wen
Huang, Lin S
Iurato, Antonella
Jensen, Elaine
Jin, Xiaoli
Jørgensen, Uffe
Kiesel, Andreas
Kim, Do-Soon
Liu, Jianxiu
McCalmont, Jon P
McMahon, Bernard G
Mos, Michal
Robson, Paul
Sacks, Erik J
Sandu, Anatolii
Scalici, Giovanni
Schwarz, Kai
Scordia, Danilo
Shafiei, Reza
Shield, Ian
Slavov, Gancho
Stanton, Brian J
Swaminathan, Kankshita
Taylor, Gail
Torres, Andres F
Trindade, Luisa M
Tschaplinski, Timothy
Tuskan, Gerald A
Yamada, Toshihiko
Yeon Yu, Chang
Zalesny, Ronald S
Zong, Junqin
Lewandowski, Iris
Journal: GCB BIOENERGY 
Issue Date: 2019
Abstract: 
Genetic improvement through breeding is one of the key approaches to increasing biomass supply. This paper documents the breeding progress to date for four perennial biomass crops (PBCs) that have high output-input energy ratios: namely Panicum virgatum (switchgrass), species of the genera Miscanthus (miscanthus), Salix (willow) and Populus (poplar). For each crop, we report on the size of germplasm collections, the efforts to date to phenotype and genotype, the diversity available for breeding and on the scale of breeding work as indicated by number of attempted crosses. We also report on the development of faster and more precise breeding using molecular breeding techniques. Poplar is the model tree for genetic studies and is furthest ahead in terms of biological knowledge and genetic resources. Linkage maps, transgenesis and genome editing methods are now being used in commercially focused poplar breeding. These are in development in switchgrass, miscanthus and willow generating large genetic and phenotypic data sets requiring concomitant efforts in informatics to create summaries that can be accessed and used by practical breeders. Cultivars of switchgrass and miscanthus can be seed-based synthetic populations, semihybrids or clones. Willow and poplar cultivars are commercially deployed as clones. At local and regional level, the most advanced cultivars in each crop are at technology readiness levels which could be scaled to planting rates of thousands of hectares per year in about 5 years with existing commercial developers. Investment in further development of better cultivars is subject to current market failure and the long breeding cycles. We conclude that sustained public investment in breeding plays a key role in delivering future mass-scale deployment of PBCs.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2067/48265
ISSN: 1757-1693
DOI: 10.1111/gcbb.12566
Rights: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Appears in Collections:A1. Articolo in rivista

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