Seed quality as a proxy of climate-ready orphan legumes: the need for a multidisciplinary and multi-actor vision

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Aug 1:15:1388866. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1388866. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

In developing countries, orphan legumes stand at the forefront in the struggle against climate change. Their high nutrient value is crucial in malnutrition and chronic diseases prevention. However, as the 'orphan' definition suggests, their seed systems are still underestimated and seed production is scanty. Seed priming is an effective, sustainable strategy to boost seed quality in orphan legumes for which up-to-date guidelines are required to guarantee reliable and reproducible results. How far are we along this path? What do we expect from seed priming? This brings to other relevant questions. What is the socio-economic relevance of orphan legumes in the Mediterranean Basin? How to potentiate a broader cultivation in specific regions? The case study of the BENEFIT-Med (Boosting technologies of orphan legumes towards resilient farming systems) project, developed by multidisciplinary research networks, envisions a roadmap for producing new knowledge and innovative technologies to improve seed productivity through priming, with the long-term objective of promoting sustainability and food security for/in the climate-sensitive regions. This review highlights the existing drawbacks that must be overcome before orphan legumes could reach the state of 'climate-ready crops'. Only by the integration of knowledge in seed biology, technology and agronomy, the barrier existing between research bench and local agricultural fields may be overcome, generating high-impact technical innovations for orphan legumes. We intend to provide a powerful message to encourage future research in line with the United Nations Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development.

Keywords: Greater Mediterranean Region; climate change; food security; multi-actor approach; resilience; seed priming and seed system; underutilized legumes; vulnerability mapping.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by PRIMA (Partnership for Research and Innovation in the Mediterranean Area) Programme-H2020, Call Multi-Topic 2021, Research & Innovation Activities-RIA, Project “Boosting technologies of orphan legumes towards resilient farming systems in the Greater Mediterranean Region: from bench to open field (BENEFIT-Med) ID: 1726 (2022-2025). AP has been awarded a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in the frame of the BENEFIT-Med project.