New crop`s need to emerge to provide sustainable solutions to climate change and increasing abiotic and biotic constraints on agriculture. A large breadth of northern fruit trees and shrubs exhibit a high potential for domestication; however, obstacles to implementing traditional breeding methods have hampered or dissuaded efforts for improvement. This review article proposes a unique roadmap for domestication of northern fruit crops, with a focus on biotechnological (e.g. genome editing, rapid cycle breeding, and transformation) approaches that can boast rapid evolutionary gains. In addition, numerous biotechnological (e.g. virus-induced flowering and grafting-mediated flowering) and breeding strategies (e.g. adaptation of speed breeding to fruit trees) that can hasten the transition from juvenility to sexual maturity are described. A description of an accelerated genetic breeding strategy with insights for 16 underutilized species (e.g. shagbark hickory, running serviceberry, horse chestnut, and black walnut) is provided to support their enhancement. Deemed unrealistic only a decade ago, progress in the realm of bioengineering heralds a future for northern orphan crops through the implementation of fast-tracked crop improvement programs. As such, the roadmap presented in this article paves the way to integrating these novel biotechnological discoveries and propel the development of these forgotten crops in a sustainable and timely manner.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11780843 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plae074 | DOI Listing |
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