Basic Principles of Plant Breeding
Chapter 1: Basic Principles of Plant Breeding Arti Singh; Jessica Barb; Asheesh Singh; and Anthony A. Mahama
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Plant breeding addresses biotic and abiotic production constraints through systematic manipulation of crop reproductive systems to develop distinct, uniform, and stable cultivars suited to specific environments and end-user needs.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Production constraints: Breeding can only address biotic (diseases, insects) and abiotic (drought, heat, poor soil) factors, not marketing, infrastructure, or policy issues.
- Reproductive systems determine breeding methods: Crops reproduce asexually (clones), autogamously (self-pollination), or allogamously (cross-pollination), and each system requires different breeding approaches.
- Cultivar types match reproductive systems: Pure-line cultivars (homogeneous, homozygous) suit self-pollinators; hybrid cultivars (homogeneous, heterozygous) suit cross-pollinators; clonal cultivars (homogeneous, heterozygous) suit vegetatively propagated crops; synthetic cultivars (heterogeneous, heterozygous) suit cross-pollinators.
- Common confusion—homogeneous vs. homozygous: Homogeneous means all individuals in a population have the same genotype; homozygous means an individual has identical alleles at a locus (A₁A₁). A clonal cultivar is homogeneous but heterozygous (A₁A₂).
- Legal cultivar definition: A cultivar must be distinct (different from existing varieties), uniform (no variation in distinguishing traits), and stable (unchanged across generations).
🌾 African crop production context
🌍 Major crops and production scale
Africa produces diverse cereals (maize, sorghum, millet, rice, wheat, barley), pulses (dry beans, groundnut, cowpeas, soybean, cocoa beans), oilseeds (seed cotton, sesame, palm), and root/tuber crops (cassava, yams, sweet potatoes, potatoes), yet contributes less than a quarter of world root and tuber production. In East Africa, bananas are extremely important—in Uganda they serve as the largest source of calories.
🚧 Production challenges breeders can address
Four main constraints reduce production:
- Biotic constraints: living organisms (disease pathogens, insects)
- Abiotic constraints: non-living factors (heat, drought, poor soil fertility)
- Marketing and infrastructure: poor marketing opportunities, lack of roads/storage, unfavorable policies
- Capital: lack of investment funds
Breeding efforts only address constraints 1 and 2. Biotic and abiotic factors also affect post-harvest storage. Continuous breeding is needed to increase production per unit land area while maintaining quality.
🌸 Reproductive systems in crops
🧬 Asexual reproduction
Asexual reproduction generates individuals that are genetically identical to the mother parent plant and are referred to as clones.
Two main forms:
- Vegetative propagation: clones from stem cuttings, suckers, tubers, runners (stolons), rhizomes, bulbs, scions. Examples: cassava and sweet potato (stem cuttings), bananas (suckers), potatoes (tubers), elephant grass (rhizomes, sets, stem cuttings).
- Apomictic reproduction: clonal seeds formed by bypassing or failing meiosis. Examples: Citrus, many perennial forages.
🌼 Sexual reproduction basics
Sexual reproduction involves union of male sperm with female egg (fertilization). Two types of pollination:
- Self-pollination: pollen from a plant pollinates a flower on the same plant.
- Cross-pollination: pollen from one plant pollinates a flower on another plant of the same species; requires wind, water, insects, birds, or other animals.
Double-fertilization (unique to flowering plants): each pollen grain contains two nuclei—one fuses with the egg cell to form a diploid zygote (embryo), the second fuses with two polar nuclei to form triploid endosperm (energy source for embryo).
🔄 Autogamous (self-pollinated) mating system
A crop is classified as autogamous when self-fertilization (union of gametes from the same plant or genotype) predominates.
Cleistogamy virtually ensures self-pollination: pollen shed occurs before the flower opens (anthesis), severely limiting cross-pollination. Observed in some legumes (groundnut, peas, some beans, soybean). In some cereals (rice, wheat, barley), most self-pollination occurs before flowers open, but some cross-pollination can occur after partial opening.
Don't confuse: Even self-pollinating species undergo small amounts of outcrossing (e.g., soybean: 0.03%–2% natural outcrossing). Environmental conditions affect mating system behavior.
Examples: sorghum, millet, rice, wheat, barley, groundnuts, cocoa, cowpeas, dry beans.
🌬️ Allogamous (cross-pollinated) mating system
A crop is classified as allogamous when it has a higher percentage of pollination and fertilization with different individuals than with itself.
Four traits/mechanisms promote cross-pollination:
| Mechanism | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Male sterility | Non-functional pollen prevents self-pollination. CMS (cytoplasmic male sterility): mitochondrial + nuclear genes. GMS (genic male sterility): nuclear genes alone. | Used for hybrid seed production |
| Self-incompatibility | Viable pollen cannot fertilize flowers of same/similar genotype; rejected on stigma or in style. | Enforces cross-pollination |
| Imperfect flowers | Unisex flowers missing stamens or pistils. Monoecious: separate male/female flowers on same plant. Dioecious: male/female flowers on different plants. | Monoecious: maize, banana. Dioecious: papaya, date palm, spinach |
| Protandry/Protogyny | Protogyny: pistils mature before anthers. Protandry: anthers mature before pistils. | Protogyny: cassava, pearl millet. Protandry: sunflower, coconut |
🧠 Why understanding reproductive systems matters
Breeders must understand the crop's reproductive system to make informed decisions about:
- Crossing techniques
- Population maintenance
- Isolation distances
- Line and population development methods
- Which cultivar type is appropriate (hybrid, pure-line, synthetic, clone)
🌱 Breeding populations and cultivar types
📊 Population concepts
A population is a group of individuals that share a common gene pool.
- Homogeneous population: all individuals have the same genotype (all A₁A₁, or all A₁A₂, or all A₂A₂).
- Heterogeneous population: individuals have different genotypes (mix of A₁A₁, A₁A₂, and/or A₂A₂).
How reproductive system affects population structure:
| Reproductive system | Population structure | Individual genotype at loci |
|---|---|---|
| Cross-pollinated | Heterogeneous | Mostly heterozygous (A₁A₂) |
| Self-pollinated | Heterogeneous | Mostly homozygous (A₁A₁ or A₂A₂) |
| Asexual | Homogeneous or heterogeneous | Likely heterozygous (A₁A₂) |
🧪 Clonal cultivars
Development steps:
- Develop a genetically variable base population
- Evaluate and select superior clones
- Multiply the new cultivar for commercial use
Key characteristics: homogeneous and heterozygous. Offspring are identical to mother parent (in absence of mutation). Hybrid vigor is fixed and maintained, unlike seed-propagated hybrids.
Propagation methods: stem cuttings, suckers, tubers, stolons.
Examples: cassava, sweet potato, potato, cacao, yam.
🔀 Synthetic cultivars
Synthetic cultivars are produced by intermating a population of purposefully selected inbred lines, clones, hybrids, strains, or other populations of cross-pollinated plants.
Key characteristics: heterogeneous and heterozygous. Each plant is genetically different. Inbreeding depression is severe; self-pollinated seed lacks vigor of cross-pollinated seed.
Development process:
- Select clonally propagated plants or inbred lines with desirable traits
- Isolate and allow cross-pollination (randomly or structured) in a polycross nursery
- Harvest seed and plant in progeny rows for evaluation
- Select best parents based on plant traits and progeny performance (general combining ability)
- Replant selected parents and permit cross-pollination in isolation
- Harvest open-pollinated seed after one or more intermating cycles
Difference from open-pollinated variety: components are maintained in original form so cultivar can be reconstituted.
Example: maize population HIS1.
📏 Pure-line cultivars
Pure-line cultivars are developed for self-pollinated species. Self-pollination leads to homozygosity and homogeneity.
Key characteristics: homogeneous and homozygous.
Three basic development approaches:
| Approach | Description | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Introductions | Assemble varieties from other regions; identify adapted lines with desirable traits | May contain mixtures requiring roguing; need MTA awareness |
| Selection | Assemble landraces; identify and release best genotypes | Applicable for orphan crops; not widely used for major crops |
| Hybridization | Make crosses between desirable genotypes; evaluate and select superior types | Most common approach |
Examples: beans, cowpea, rice, finger millet, tobacco, wheat.
🌽 Hybrid cultivars
Hybrid cultivars are produced by crossing inbred lines, typically two inbred lines in a two-way/single-cross hybrid.
Key characteristics:
- Single-cross hybrids: homogeneous and heterozygous
- Three-way hybrids: heterogeneous and heterozygous
Inbred lines are chosen for combining ability to maximize hybrid vigor. Pollen control (mechanical tools, chemicals, or genetic male sterility) is necessary for hybrid seed production.
Heterosis definitions:
- Midparent heterosis: difference between hybrid and mean of two parents
- High-parent heterosis: superiority of hybrid over the better parent
Don't confuse: Hybrid vigor is more important in allogamous species; expression is typically lower in autogamous species.
Examples: commercial single-cross maize hybrids, three-way cross maize hybrids, sunflower hybrids. Some hybrids produced for autogamous species (sorghum, tomato).
⚖️ Legal definition of a cultivar (UPOV)
📜 Three required criteria
According to The International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV), a cultivar must be:
Distinct (Article 7)
A variety is deemed to be distinct if it is clearly distinguishable from any other variety whose existence is a matter of common knowledge at the time of filing of the application.
Distinctiveness can involve morphological, physiological, molecular, or other characteristics.
Uniform (Article 8)
A variety is deemed to be uniform if, subject to the variation that may be expected from the particular features of its propagation, it is sufficiently uniform in its relevant characteristics.
No variation among individuals for distinguishing characteristics. Does not seek absolute uniformity; takes into account the nature of the variety itself. Relates only to relevant characteristics for protection.
Stable (Article 9)
A variety is deemed to be stable if its relevant characteristics remain unchanged after repeated propagation or, in the case of a particular cycle of propagation, at the end of each such cycle.
Plants remain the same from generation to generation. Ensures identity of variety is kept throughout protection period. Relates only to relevant characteristics.
🌍 UPOV background
UPOV is an intergovernmental organization based in Geneva, Switzerland, established in 1961. Mission: "provide and promote an effective system of plant variety protection, with the aim of encouraging the development of new varieties of plants, for the benefit of society."
🎯 Setting breeding objectives
🔑 Factors determining objectives
Plant breeding objectives depend on:
- Geographical adaptation
- Prevalent biotic and abiotic factors influencing production
- Uses of the cultivar
- Crop reproductive system (pure-line or hybrid)
- Factors important to farmers and end-users
✅ Prerequisites for breeding
- Genetic variation must exist for the trait being improved
- Variation must be transmissible (heritable)
- Breeding programs must be adequately set up for screening breeding material based on objectives