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Exploring barley diversity for resilience and sustainability

Challenges

There is a pressing need to establish an environmentally benign and sustainable supply of locally produced high-quality barley grain to safeguard the economically important premium food and drink (and feed) sectors. The sector is represented by the malting, brewing and distilling industries comprising 2,274 breweries (in 2018), 122 Scotch Whisky and 441 Gin distilleries (The Drinks Business, 2020). The national importance of the distillery sector is reflected in its estimated gross value added of £8.25 billion. The Scotch Whisky industry provides £5.5 billion with the majority exports that comprise 20% of all UK food and drink exports value. Barley destined for the feed market represents around two-thirds of the annual crop. The sector would benefit from more resilient and sustainable production.

The process of malting and distilling is energy intensive. The industry has already made enormous strides in reducing carbon outputs and has ambitious plans to bring the production of whisky towards net zero. However, only half of the carbon used to produce a bottle of whisky is derived from manufacturing. The remainder largely comes from the production of grain and malt – processes beyond the industries’ direct control.

In the UK, barley cultivars are generally bred from the narrow ‘cultivated’ gene pool and selected through a registration process operating under intensive agricultural systems. Such systems create potential vulnerabilities to pests and diseases, environmental sensitivity, and high input requirements. The use of crop diversity, adapted to low or no inputs, has long been discussed as an approach to tackle these vulnerabilities. However, greater crop diversity has been generally unattractive for use in plant breeding due to performance issues of early-generation genotypes and associated economic risks (for example, it is too tall or not adapted to northwest European conditions). Natural diversity is in fact a rich source of genes and alleles that, together or on their own, have great potential for improving resilience of the crop. More work is needed to actively exploit this variation to understand trait evolution at the genetic level towards ultimately developing more environmentally benign crop production.

Questions

  • Which existing crops and wild relatives can be utilised to enhance the genetic diversity of crops in Scotland’s land use and biodiversity?
  • What tools and technologies can underpin the genetic improvement of crops relevant to Scotland, including disease resistance and underpinning future farming and land use systems?
  • What are the key interactions of plant pests and pathogens with their hosts for endemic pests and diseases in crops of key relevance for Scotland?

Solutions

The overarching aim of this project is to explore the practical use of extensive natural variation present in the primary barley gene pool to improve the environmental sustainability of crop production.

 

Mobilising untapped genetic diversity

We are improving and exploiting genetic variation in diverse barley landraces and wild relatives from the primary gene pool and exploring genetic approaches in which recombination is genetically altered to enable access to the secondary gene pool. We are using traditional approaches to create new and novel germplasm resources, which are being combined with deep genotypic and phenotypic analysis to characterise the resulting germplasm. We address a fundamental issue that is vexing the genetic resources and breeding communities: how to efficiently extract value from diverse germplasm in crop improvement programs for complex and multigenic traits.

 

Safeguarding production

We are addressing pressing environmental issues affecting barley crop production through searches for genetic solutions. We embrace innovative -omics scale research to explore both climate and regulatory issues with a view to developing genetic or agronomic strategies to minimise losses and maintain production. We are supporting research to explore and improve weed management and chemical inputs that could involve the development of new or novel crop types. 

 

Plant-soil interactions

We are exploring plant-soil interactions addressing soil nitrogen, macro- and micro-nutrients (including manganese) uptake efficiency. This includes the identification of germplasm and collection of data that reveal genetic variation for the studied traits, and subsequently the identification of genetic loci controlling that variation. We are delivering the molecular identity and validation of genes/alleles that condition the studied traits and appropriate germplasm for use in plant breeding. In the case of manganese uptake efficiency, previously developed germplasm developed is already well advanced and we expect practical impacts of this work to be on broad acre mainland barley crop production as well as improved production in marginal crofting communities. Our focus is on the interaction between the barley crop and its below ground growing environment and the efficient use of resident or applied inputs in crop production.

 

Data Management and Open Science

We are opening the analysis of complex transcriptomic datasets to the general research community through intuitive and user-friendly interfaces. We are also extending the globally established GERMINATE plant genetic resources database infrastructure to incorporate data-dense, multi-omics and time-series information, including automatically captured field phenotypic data. Key milestones include the release of data management pipelines for short and long read RNA-sequence transcriptome data and periodic updates to different software that incorporate either additional functionality or improve user experience. We are developing web-accessible research tools or infrastructure that promote data curation and analysis.

Project Partners

James Hutton Institute

Progress

2022 / 2023
2022 / 2023

Mobilising untapped genetic diversity

Many traits that allow barley to survive and flourish under challenging environments have been lost and we aim to create novel germplasm for future crop improvement. We have initiated the development of three diverse populations by crossing 10 diverse wild barleys with a modern cultivar and selecting 400 partially domesticated lines. Meiotic mutants that increase gene reassortment with modern cultivars containing exotic DNA introgressions, producing hybrid seed; different row-type heritage barleys to develop a multiparent Multi-parent Advanced Generation Inter-Crosses (MAGIC) population. The partially-domesticated and MAGIC populations will go through rapid breeding to enable field evaluation, and mutant hybrid seed stored for future use.

Safeguarding production

We will explore the interactions between barley and the environment, using contemporary genetics under both controlled and field conditions challenging the plants with temperature or water stress, and reduced inputs. Barley was subjected to temperatures between 4 and 40 °C, whereafter leaves were sampled and sequence to identify genes involved in temperature response and recovery. A draft manuscript is in progress. The effect of low nitrogen inputs was examined through large-scale field trails of diverse genetic materials and growth and development monitored throughout the growing season. Grain yield and quality measures are underway, and a second sowing season is being prepared. To identify candidate genes underpinning the observed variation, we have scored 5.5 million robust sequence variants in the core set of expressed barley genes and developed a new resequencing approach to identify novel variants in targeted genes.

Plant-soil interactions

We are exploring the relationship between barley and soil using different nutrients, soil types and barley germplasm. A field trail of 300 diverse barley accessions was conducted with variable nitrogen application levels. Leaves and shoots were analysed for N-content and the diversity of soil microbes assessed. We identified significant nitrogen-use-efficiency and tolerances. By collating soil data using geographical locations of 400 wild and landrace barleys with genotypic data, we have been able to identify variants associated with important soil-related traits. A population developed by crossing Bere with an elite cultivar that segregates for response to manganese, allowed identification of two major loci controlling this trait. Initial finding will be explored further in subsequent years of the project.

Data management and Open Science

The BARGAIN work packages generate considerable volumes of data, which require collating, storing, visualisation and analysis. We are developing solutions applicable not only to barley, but other crop species as well. For gene expression sequence data, analysis pipelines were established, with a fully functioning interface. To enable collection, storage and visualisation, the Germinate database has been extended by implementing and testing new schema for exemplar barley data, including lab- and field-based phenotypes and image data from unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) platforms. To improve field phenotyping, we have developed user-friendly tools (GridScore) to efficiently record data, which is being used by the wider community.

Project Impact

The research performed in BARGAIN impacts at a range of different levels. Within the scientific community, we have published 21 peer-reviewed papers. Since the project started, we have won significant funding to work with stakeholders from across the barley supply chain (BBSRC Collaborative Training Partnership (CTP)), funding 30 PhD students working on industry-related projects. This programme is driven by policy, in terms of working towards a sustainable production and supply of barley for Scotland's future green recovery, focusing on the pillars of climate resilience, lowering inputs and healthier soils. In addition, travel grants have been awarded to foster and develop international collaborations in Brazil, Australia and Germany.

At Westminster, we attended an All-Party Parliamentary Group on Science and Technology in Agriculture (APPGSTA) to highlight the importance of UK-led innovation in barley crop for driving economic growth and exports in the UK's malting, brewing and distilling sectors. Based upon new visual approaches to large datasets, we were invited to host workshops and talks at international conferences and establish new collaborations. We have regularly interacted with the farming sector, having a stand at Cereals 2022 and presenting our research at the Royal Highland Show, Arable Scotland and Cereal Open Days. With regards to interactions with the general public, we have presented and discussed our research at Plant Power Day and Fascination of Plants Day at Dundee Botanic Gardens. We organised our annual Barley Away Days event, hosting talks from our stakeholders. 

 

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