A Review of Rapid Generation Advancement (RGA) in Crop Improvement

Bhargava, Kotte and Abhishek, E. and Madhusudhan, Barla and Naveen, A. and Akhil, V. Sai and Yadav, T. Venu and Mudhale, Abhijeet and Kumar, G. Anil (2023) A Review of Rapid Generation Advancement (RGA) in Crop Improvement. International Journal of Plant & Soil Science, 35 (7). pp. 138-145. ISSN 2320-7035

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Abstract

The use of the speed breeding method is widely considered to be the wave of the future in plant breeding. The term "speed breeding" is used to describe a rapid generational advancement technique that is used to minimise the time it takes from seed to seed, therefore reducing the length of a crop plant's typical life cycle. Plants that are not sensitive to light may have as many as six generations in a single year using this method, whereas other plants can only expect two or three generations every year. With this technique, the photoperiodic and temperature needs of crops produced in controlled-poly homes may be altered. This methodology, when combined with other cutting-edge tools like genome editing and high-throughput genotyping systems, may help breed new kinds of crops at a much quicker pace. Spacefaring food producers: NASA first conceived of this notion. Breeder's equation may be used to determine whether speed breeding is applicable to a certain crop. Light, photoperiodic regime, temperature, and humidity modification make up the backbone of the fast-breeding formula. Accelerated breeding, expedited genomic selection, improved transgenic and CRISPR-Cas9 pipelines, and the investigation of critically important agricultural plant physiological properties are just some of the numerous uses for this approach.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Library Keep > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@librarykeep.com
Date Deposited: 04 Apr 2023 10:17
Last Modified: 03 Jan 2024 07:01
URI: http://archive.jibiology.com/id/eprint/463

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