The climatic challenge: which plants will people use in the next century?
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Authors
Borrell, J.S.Dodsworth, Steven
Forest, Felix
Pérez-Escobar, Oscar Alejandro
Lee, M.A.
Mattana, E.
Stevenson, P.C.
Howes, M.-J.R.
Pritchard, Hugh W.
Ballesteros, D.
Kusumoto, B.
Ondo, I.
Moat, J.
Milliken, W.
Ryan, P.
Ulian, T.
Pironon, S.
Affiliation
Royal Botanic Gardens, KewUniversity of Bedfordshire
University of Greenwich
King’s College London
University of the Ryukyus
Issue Date
2019-08-30Subjects
biodiversityclimate change
conservation
crop breeding
crop wild relatives
domestication
food security
medicinal plants
sustainable development
resilience
C200 Botany
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More than 31,000 useful plant species have been documented to fulfil needs and services for humans or the animals and environment we depend on. Despite this diversity, humans currently satisfy most requirements with surprisingly few plant species; for example, just three crops – rice, wheat and maize – comprise more than 50% of plant derived calories. Here, we synthesize the projected impact of global climatic change on useful plants across the spectrum of plant domestication. We illustrate the demographic, spatial, ecophysiological, chemical, functional, evolutionary and cultural traits that are likely to characterise useful plants and their resilience in the next century. Using this framework, we consider a range of possible pathways for future human use of plants. These are centred on two trade-offs: i) diversification versus specialization in the range of species we utilize, and ii) substitutionof the species towards those better suited to future climate versus facilitating adaptation in our existing suite of dominant useful plants. In the coming century, major challenges to agriculture and biodiversity will be dominated by increased climatic variation, shifting species ranges, disruption to biotic interactions, nutrient limitation and emerging pests and pathogens. These challenges must be mitigated, whilst enhancing sustainable production to meet the needs of a growing population and a more resource intensive standard of living. With the continued erosion of biodiversity, our future ability to choose among these pathways and trade-offs is likely to be diminished.Citation
Borrell JS, Dodsworth S, Forest F, Pérez-Escobar OA, Lee MA, Mattana E, Stevenson PC, Howes M-JR, Pritchard HW, Ballesteros D, Kusumoto B, Ondo I, Moat J, Milliken W, Ryan P, Ulian T, Pironon S (2019) 'The climatic challenge: which plants will people use in the next century?', Environmental and Experimental Botany, (170), 103872Publisher
ElsevierAdditional Links
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0098847219304459Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
0098-8472ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.envexpbot.2019.103872
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