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  • Book
    Mario J. Pastorino, Paula Marchelli, editors.
    Summary: Global climate change requires the development of programs that consider the active restoration of degraded forests and the use of native trees in afforestation to preserve the natural environment. International commitments like the UN REDD program, the Montréal Process and the Convention on Biological Diversity call for the breeding of species rarely contemplated by large industrial companies. Low-intensity breeding is the most rational strategy for those species: simple but robust, and not dependent on continuously increasing funding, and therefore effective even with a relatively small budget. It commonly focuses on high genetic diversity rather than improving economic traits and adaptability rather than productivity. Controlled crosses with full pedigrees typical of high-intensity breeding are replaced by open pollination. This book presents state-of-the-art breeding strategies from the last two decades for several forest tree species of prime importance in the natural forests of Argentina. They are distributed in the three main forestry ecoregions of the country: the subtropical dry forest (Chaco), the subtropical rain forests (Yungas and Alto Paraná rainforests) and the temperate forests of Patagonia. The book also discusses the genetic patterns of the selected species defined using genetic markers together with the analysis of the variation in quantitative traits. Further, it examines the crucial features of their reproductive biology, such as the mating system and gene flow and describes the current breeding programs. Lastly, it presents the latest developments in genetic resources and their emerging applications, concluding with some reflections and perspectives related to the conditioning imposed by climate change.

    Contents:
    Chapter 1
    Native forests claim for breeding in Argentina: general concepts and their state
    Section I
    Temperate Subantarctic Forests Chapter 2
    Temperate Subantarctic Forests: a huge natural laboratory
    Chapter 3
    Raulí (Nothofagus alpina = N. nervosa): the best quality hardwood in Patagonia
    Chapter 4
    Roble pellín (Nothofagus obliqua): a southern beech with a restricted distribution area in Argentina but a wide environmental range
    Chapter 5
    Nothofagus Mixed Forest: a breeding program for an interspecific hybridization system
    Chapter 6
    Patterns of genetic variation of lenga (Nothofagus pumilio) and ñire (Nothofagus antarctica): the most widely distributed and cold tolerant southern beeches in Patagonia
    Chapter 7
    Patagonian Cypres (Austrocedrus chilensis): the cedarwood of the emblematic architecture of North Patagonia
    Chapter 8
    Other species pf high ecological value
    Section II
    Subtropical Dry Forests
    Chapter 9
    Subtropical dry forests: the main forest ecoregion of Argentina
    Chapter 10
    Genetic variation patterns of algarrobos (Prosopis sp.) from "Gran Chaco Americano" (P. alba, P. nigra, P. hassleri, P. chilensis and P. flexuosa)
    Chapter 11
    Genetic breeding of Prosopis species from "Gran Chaco Americano" Chapter 12
    Species without current breeding relevance but high economic value
    Section III
    Subtropical Rainforests
    Chapter 13
    Subtropical rainforests: the Yungas and the Paranaense Rainforest
    Chapter 14
    Patterns of neutral genetic variation for three high-value cedar species from the Subtropical Rainforests of Argentina
    Chapter 15
    Breeding strategy for the Cedrela genus in Argentina
    Chapter 16
    Pino Paraná (Araucaria angustifolia): the most planted native forest tree species in Argentina
    Chapter 17
    Peteribí (Cordia trichotoma), Lapacho (Handroanthus impetiginosus) and Cebil (Anadenanthera colubrina var. cebil): three valuable species with incipient breeding programs
    Section IV
    Other species, new tools and final considerations
    Chapter 18
    Applications of High-Throughput Sequencing technologies on native forest tree species of Argentina and implications for low intensity breeding programs
    Chapter 19
    Questions, perspectives and final considerations under the global climate change conditioning.
    Digital Access Springer 2021