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It is a distressing truism that the human race during the last
millennium has caused the exponential loss of plant genetic
diversity throughout the world. This has had direct and negative
economic, political and social consequences for the human race,
which at the same time has failed to exploit fully the positive
benefits that might result from conserving and exploiting the
world's plant genetic resources. However, a strong movement to halt
this loss of plant diversity and enhance its utilisation for the
benefit of all humanity has been underway since the 1960's (Frankel
and Bennett, 1970; Frankel and Hawkes, 1975). This initiative was
taken up by the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD, 1992) that
not only expounds the need to conserve biological diversity but
links conservation to exploitation and development for the benefit
of all. Article 8 of the Convention clearly states the need to
develop more effective and efficient guidelines to conserve
biological diversity, while Article 9, along with the FAO
International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources, promotes the
adoption of a complementary approach to conservation that
incorporates both ex situ and in situ techniques.
We live in critical times for the world's diversity of plants and
animals. It is universally agreed that a catastrophic loss of
biological diversity is occurring at the moment, with species, and
equally importantly, genes being lost forever. However, the signing
of the Biodiversity Convention at the Earth Summit in 1992 drew
attention to the need to conserve and equitably utilize biological
diversity for the benefit of all humankind. The convention placed
emphasis on the need for a complementary approach to conservation
that employed both ex situ and in situ techniques. Though much
conservation and genetic research has focused on ex situ
techniques, where the biological diversity is moved from its
original location for safe storage, relatively little progress has
been made in developing strategies appropriate for the genetic
conservation of biological diversity in situ, in its native
environment. The time is right for a definitive assessment of the
principles required to conserve the genetic diversity of crops,
their wild relatives and wild species within natural habitats. This
book therefore provides a practical and theoretical introduction to
the techniques of in situ conservation of plant genetic resources.
It includes methodologies, case studies and in-depth discussion of
on-farm and genetic reserve conservation, written by acknowledged
international experts on the subject.
It is a distressing truism that the human race during the last
millennium has caused the exponential loss of plant genetic
diversity throughout the world. This has had direct and negative
economic, political and social consequences for the human race,
which at the same time has failed to exploit fully the positive
benefits that might result from conserving and exploiting the
world's plant genetic resources. However, a strong movement to halt
this loss of plant diversity and enhance its utilisation for the
benefit of all humanity has been underway since the 1960's (Frankel
and Bennett, 1970; Frankel and Hawkes, 1975). This initiative was
taken up by the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD, 1992) that
not only expounds the need to conserve biological diversity but
links conservation to exploitation and development for the benefit
of all. Article 8 of the Convention clearly states the need to
develop more effective and efficient guidelines to conserve
biological diversity, while Article 9, along with the FAO
International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources, promotes the
adoption of a complementary approach to conservation that
incorporates both ex situ and in situ techniques.
The recent development of ideas on biodiversity conservation was
already being considered almost three-quarters of a century ago for
crop plants and the wild species related to them, by the Russian
geneticist N. . Vavilov. He was undoubtedly the first scientist to
understand the impor tance for humankind of conserving for
utilization the genetic diversity of our ancient crop plants and
their wild relatives from their centres of diversity. His
collections showed various traits of adaptation to environ mental
extremes and biotypes of crop diseases and pests which were unknown
to most plant breeders in the first quarter of the twentieth cen
tury. Later, in the 1940s-1960s scientists began to realize that
the pool of genetic diversity known to Vavilov and his colleagues
was beginning to disappear. Through the replacement of the old,
primitive and highly diverse land races by uniform modem varieties
created by plant breed ers, the crop gene pool was being eroded.
The genetic diversity of wild species was equally being threatened
by human activities: over-exploita tion, habitat destruction or
fragmentation, competition resulting from the introduction of alien
species or varieties, changes and intensification of land use,
environmental pollution and possible climate change."
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