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Genetically uniform cultivars in many self-pollinated cereal crops
dominate commercial production in high-input environments
especially due to their high grain yields and wide geographical
adaptation. These cultivars generally perform well under favorable
and high-input farming systems but their optimal performance cannot
be achieved on marginal/organic lands or without the use of
external chemical inputs (fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides).
Cereal breeding programs aim at evaluating candidate
lines/cultivars for agronomic, disease and quality traits in a weed
free environment that makes it impossible to identify traits
conferring competitive ability against weeds. Moreover,
quantification of competitive ability is a complex phenomenon which
is affected by range of growth traits. Above (e.g. light) and below
(e.g. water and nutrients) ground resources also influence
competitiveness to a greater extent. Competitiveness is
quantitatively inherited trait which is heavily influenced by many
factors including genotype, management, environment and their
interaction. Sound plant breeding techniques and good experimental
designs are prerequisites for maximizing genetic gains to breed
cultivars for organically managed lands. The brief is focused on
breeding wheat for enhanced competitive ability along with other
agronomic, genetic and molecular studies that have been undertaken
to improve weed suppression, disease resistance and quality in
organically managed lands. The examples from other cereals have
also been highlighted to compare wheat with other cereal crops.
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