Two decades of creating drought tolerant maize and underpinning prediction technologies in the US corn-belt: Review and perspectives on the future of crop design

2020 
Over the last decade, society witnessed the largest expansion of agricultural land planted with drought tolerant (DT) maize (Zea mays L.) Dedicated efforts to drought breeding led to development of DT maize. Here we show that after two decades of sustained breeding efforts the rate of crop improvement under drought is in the range 1.0-1.6% yr-1, which is higher than rates (0.7% yr-1) reported prior to drought breeding. Prediction technologies that leverage biological understanding and statistical learning to improve upon the quantitative genetics framework will further accelerate genetic gain. A review of published and unpublished analyses conducted on data including 138 breeding populations and 93 environments between 2009 and 2019 demonstrated an average prediction skill (r) improvement around 0.2. These methods applied to pre-commercial stages showed accuracies higher that current statistical approaches (0.85 vs. 0.70). Improvement in hybrid and management choice can increase water productivity. Digital gap analyses are applicable at field scale suggesting the possibility of transition from evaluating hybrids to designing genotype x management (GxM) technologies for target cropping systems in drought prone areas. Due to the biocomplexity of drought, research and development efforts should be sustained to advance knowledge and iteratively improve models. HighlightCrop improvement rate in maize increased after implementation of drought breeding efforts. Harnessing crop, quantitative genetics and gap models will enable the transition from genetic evaluation to crop design.
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