Queensland, Australia
May 22, 2006
A research project on
disease-resistant fodder crops has been applauded for its novel
commercial outcomes, receiving a 2006 Award for Excellence in
Innovation from the Cooperative Research Centres Assocation.
Professor John Irwin, a Plant Pathologist at the
University of Queensland
(UQ), CEO of the UQ-based Cooperative Research Centre for
Tropical Plant Protection, and 2006 Farrer Medallist, led the
research project to produce nine disease-resistant,
high-yielding forage cultivars for the global livestock
industries: six lucerne varieties, one oat, one cowpea and one
stylo.
The CRC's new cultivars have opened up markets for Australian
seed companies in Argentina and Saudi Arabia, expanding the $14
billion annual flow-on benefits for fodder crops to the beef,
sheep, dairy, and horse industries.
The two newest varieties developed out of the project – lucerne
cultivars commercialised by Toowoomba seed company Pacific Seeds
– were recently valued at $45 million in extra production to
farmers.
The project's work involved collaborations between researchers
at the University of Queensland, Queensland`s Department of
Primary Industries and Fisheries and CSIRO, using DNA marker
technologies to identify resistant genes which were then
introduced into new lucerne cultivars.
These molecular-based technologies allowed the team to
facilitate recombining several resistance genes into the one
plant, enhancing traditional plant breeding techniques to great
effect.
The CRC for Tropical Plant Protection completes its final year
of funding in June this year; however, the more than 50 genetic
markers identified at the Centre for improved yield and disease
resistance in lucerne will be used in future breeding programs.
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