兼顾质量与数量:英国面包小麦案例研究

N. Fradgley, Keith A. Gardner, Matt Kerton, Stéphanie M. Swarbreck, Alison R. Bentley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

提高作物产量往往被作为满足全球人口增长对粮食安全需求的一个关键目标。然而,仅实现作物高产而不满足最终用途的质量要求与这一目标背道而驰,并可能导致负面的环境和可持续性问题。英国的高产饲料小麦作物就是一个典型的例子。我们研究了英国农业工业化的历史背景、植物育种的发展以及小麦的终端加工。面包小麦(Triticum aestivum L.)在历史上一直是许多人类文明的重要作物。如今,小麦供应和贸易的变化对全球经济和粮食安全产生了巨大影响。英国是一个工业化国家的典范,它通过集约化种植系统和有利的气候实现了小麦的高产。然而,只有少数小麦谷物的最终使用质量适合现代面包烘焙方法,大部分小麦用于喂养牲畜。大量农业用地和投入品用于生产动物而非人类食用的谷物,对环境可持续性和国内粮食生产产生了广泛的负面影响。在此,我们从历史角度介绍了导致英国小麦生产重数量轻质量的农业和经济变化。农业集约化、农产品自由贸易自由化、制粉和烘焙行业的创新、对遗传学和植物育种的科学理解的发展以及地缘政治的变化都在其中发挥了作用。我们认为,小麦育种在影响这些问题方面发挥着至关重要的作用,尽管英国的小麦育种人员历来都在应用最新的科学成果,但基因组学工具和定量遗传学的最新进展为育种人员提供了一个独特的机会,可借以纠正数量和质量之间的平衡。
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Balancing quality with quantity: A case study of UK bread wheat
Increasing crop productivity is often proposed as a key goal for meeting the food security demands of a growing global population. However, achieving high crop yields alone without meeting end‐use quality requirements is counter to this objective and can lead to negative environmental and sustainability issues. High yielding feed wheat crops in the United Kingdom are a typical example of this. The historical context of UK agricultural industrialisation, developments in plant breeding and wheat end‐use processing are examined. We then outline how employing innovations in plant breeding methods offer the potential to redress the balance between wheat quantity and quality.Bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has historically been an important crop for many human civilisations. Today, variability in wheat supply and trade has a large influence on global economies and food security. The United Kingdom is an example of an industrialised country that achieves high wheat yields through intensive cropping systems and a favourable climate. However, only a minority of the wheat grain produced is of suitable end‐use quality for modern bread baking methods and most wheat produced is fed to livestock. A large agricultural land area and input use dedicated to producing grain for animal rather than human food has wide‐ranging negative impacts for environmental sustainability and domestic food production. Here we present an historical perspective of agricultural and economic changes that have resulted in UK production primarily focussing on wheat quantity over quality. Agricultural intensification, liberalisation of free trade in agricultural commodities, innovations in the milling and baking sector, developments in scientific understanding of genetics and plant breeding, and geopolitical changes have all played a role. We propose that wheat breeding plays a crucial role in influencing these issues and although wheat breeders in the United Kingdom have historically applied the most‐up‐to‐date scientific advances, recent advances in genomics tools and quantitative genetics present a unique opportunity for breeders to redress the balance between quantity and quality.
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