Authors
ME Dulloo, AW Ebert, Stéphane Dussert, E Gotor, C Astorga, N Vasquez, JJ Rakotomalala, A Rabemiafara, M Eira, B Bellachew, C Omondi, Florent Engelmann, François Anthony, J Watts, Z Qamar, L Snook
Publication date
2009/11
Journal
Crop science
Volume
49
Issue
6
Pages
2123-2138
Publisher
Crop Science Society of America
Description
Coffee (Coffea spp.) is one of the world's most valuable agricultural export commodities produced by small‐scale farmers. Its germplasm, which holds useful traits for crop improvement, has traditionally been conserved in field genebanks, which presents many challenges for conservation. New techniques of in vitro and cryopreservation have been developed to improve the long‐term conservation of coffee. But a question remains as to whether these new techniques are more cost effective than field collections and more efficient at reducing genetic erosion. This study compared the costs of maintaining one of the world's largest coffee field collections with those of establishing a coffee cryo‐collection at the Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza (CATIE) in Costa Rica. The results indicate that cryopreservation costs less (in perpetuity per accession) than conservation in field genebanks. A …
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