 Cultivated sunflowers.
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 The dune sunflower, Helianthus niveussubspecies
tephrodes, is found only in Sonora, Mexico, and in the Algodones Sand
Dune System, a 1,000-square-mile area in southeastern California. (Image
courtesy Tom Gulya, ARS; not available at 300 dpi.) |
ARS Diversifies Sunflower Traits
By Jan Suszkiw
December 29, 2004
Wild sunflowers--whether growing beside a fast-food restaurant parking
lot or clinging to shifting sand dunes--are worth their weight in gold to
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists.
Wild species seeds, according to the researchers, contain genes for
improving cultivated sunflower and bolstering its resistance to insect pests
and diseases. Genes from one such species led to cytoplasmic male sterility,
the mechanism by which today's sunflower breeders develop new sunflower
hybrids. The economic value of traits already bred into cultivated sunflower
from wild species is an estimated $267 million to $384 million annually.
ARS scientists have been collecting wild sunflowers since 1976,
amassing representative populations of the 50 known Helianthus species,
according to scientists
Tom
Gulya and
Gerald
Seiler, in the ARS Sunflower Research
Unit, Fargo, N.D. Accessions are placed in the ARS National Plant Germplasm
System (NPGS)
at Ames, Iowa, for safekeeping and distribution to sunflower researchers
worldwide.
The Fargo unit is a clearinghouse of sorts for newly collected
specimens en route to being catalogued and stored at NPGS. Seeds are first
evaluated for weight, oil content and fatty acid composition. The new
accessions are then tested for possible resistance to economically important
sunflower diseases.
H. annuus is the predominant Helianthus species kept at
NPGS, which has 2,163 accessions. H. annuus' preference for disturbed
soils--like roadside grading and constructions sites--indicates the species'
tenacity and adaptability, according to Gulya. Others are habitat-specific and
vulnerable to human activity. In Texas, road projects pushed aside populations
of H. paradoxus. Fortunately, new ones were found in New Mexico. Now,
H. paradoxus' seed is in safe storage, including its genes for breeding
salt- and drought-tolerant hybrids.
Seiler and Gulya collect sunflowers once or twice a year, typically
driving 2,500 to 3,000 miles per trip, much of that on back roads. They map and
describe each new site so future collections can be made. They estimate at
least one trip annually for the next 10 years will be needed to collect all
remaining species native to the United States.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.