Improvement of cool-season food legumes for adaptation to intercropping systems: breeding faba bean for intercropping with durum wheat as a case study

Front Plant Sci. 2024 May 16:15:1368509. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1368509. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Although the transition toward a more sustainable agricultural system is sparking the interest of scientists and farmers around the globe, breeding programs are still focusing on optimizing cultivars intended for the monoculture system, and most cultivars available on the market are not suitable for intercropping. The incorporation of versatile cool-season food legumes (CSFLs) in the intercropping system is a promising way toward more diversified and sustainable cropping systems. However, as the selection of good-performing cultivars under sole cropping does not always lead to a good performance in intercropping, the development of an alternative breeding scheme for intercropping is now a necessity. The case study of faba bean-wheat intercropping was used to select for traits associated with better performance of faba bean, resulting in identifying the combined grain yield, 100-seed weight, number of pods per plant, and canopy height as key traits for faba bean-wheat intercropping suitability. Incorporating these traits in the breeding programs would be the cornerstone of the prospective transition.

Keywords: breeding; cool season food legumes; faba bean; intercropping; traits for intercropping.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. INIT-01 Accelerated Breeding (ABI) Meeting Farmers’ Needs with Nutritious, Climate-Resilient (agreement 200308), China Bilateral Program 2023 Implementation Funding (agreement 200351) and by Spanish projects PID2020-114668RB-I00 and PCI2020-111974 (financed by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and NextGenerationEU/PRTR), and by Junta de Andalucía PAIDI 2020 project P20_00986.