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- Title
Overcoming barriers to the registration of new plant varieties under the DUS system.
- Authors
Yang, Chin Jian; Russell, Joanne; Ramsay, Luke; Thomas, William; Powell, Wayne; Mackay, Ian
- Abstract
Distinctness, Uniformity and Stability (DUS) is an intellectual property system introduced in 1961 by the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) for safeguarding the investment and rewarding innovation in developing new plant varieties. Despite the rapid advancement in our understanding of crop biology over the past 60 years, the DUS system has changed little and is still largely dependent upon a set of morphological traits for testing candidate varieties. As the demand for more plant varieties increases, the barriers to registration of new varieties become more acute and thus require urgent review to the system. To highlight the challenges and remedies in the current system, we evaluated a comprehensive panel of 805 UK barley varieties that span the entire history of DUS testing. Our findings reveal the system deficiencies such as inconsistencies in DUS traits across environments, limitations in DUS trait combinatorial space, and inadequacies in currently available DUS markers. We advocate the concept of genomic DUS and provide evidence for a shift towards a robust genomics-enabled registration system for new crop varieties. Yang et al. use a genomic approach to evaluate a panel of 805 UK barley varieties and the value of the DUS system for plant registration. Their findings suggest that morphological traits are not appropriate for registering new barley varieties, and suggest that a genomic system should be developed for future use.
- Subjects
CULTIVARS; INTELLECTUAL property; PLANT development; PLANT genetics; PLANT morphology
- Publication
Communications Biology, 2021, Vol 4, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2399-3642
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s42003-021-01840-9