Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98

This report, which updates and extends the findings of an earlier CIMMYT study published in 1994, documents the impacts of international maize breeding research in the developing world. Covering the period 1966-98, the report reviews public and private investment in maize breeding research, describes the products of public and private maize breeding programs, estimates farm level adoption of modern varieties (MVs), and estimates the gross value of additional grain production attributable to international breeding efforts. Although private companies have greatly increased their investment in maize breeding research in recent years, public maize breeding programs still play an important role, especially in breeding for subsistence-oriented farmers. Seed sales data show that the maize seed industry in many developing countries has effectively been privatized and that hybrid seed sales now dominate sales of all other seed types. The area planted to MVs continues to expand at an impressive rate. Maize MVs are currently grown on at least 58.8 million ha in developing countries, including at least 21.2 million ha planted to MVs that contain CIMMYT germplasm. The gross value of additional grain production attributable to the adoption of maize MVs in developing countries is estimated to range from US$ 3.7 million to US$ll.l billion per year. Analysis of varietal pedigrees shows that breeders in both the public and private sectors have made extensive use of CIMMYT germplasm. Over 54% of publicly bred MVs released in the developing world since 1966 have contained CIMMYT germplasm. The pedigrees of many privately bred cultivars are confidential, but CIMMYT germplasm was present in 58% of MVs developed by private breeding programs being sold in the late 1990s for which pedigree information is available. The gross benefits attributable to CIMMYT's maize breeding program are estimated to range from US$167 million to US$1.5 billion per year.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morris, M.L.
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 2001
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT, BREEDING METHODS, GERMPLASM, INNOVATION ADOPTION, PUBLIC SECTOR, RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS, PLANT BREEDING,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1035
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-10352020-11-25T20:32:11Z Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98 Morris, M.L. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT BREEDING METHODS GERMPLASM INNOVATION ADOPTION PUBLIC SECTOR RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS PLANT BREEDING AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT BREEDING METHODS GERMPLASM INNOVATION ADOPTION PUBLIC SECTOR RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS PLANT BREEDING This report, which updates and extends the findings of an earlier CIMMYT study published in 1994, documents the impacts of international maize breeding research in the developing world. Covering the period 1966-98, the report reviews public and private investment in maize breeding research, describes the products of public and private maize breeding programs, estimates farm level adoption of modern varieties (MVs), and estimates the gross value of additional grain production attributable to international breeding efforts. Although private companies have greatly increased their investment in maize breeding research in recent years, public maize breeding programs still play an important role, especially in breeding for subsistence-oriented farmers. Seed sales data show that the maize seed industry in many developing countries has effectively been privatized and that hybrid seed sales now dominate sales of all other seed types. The area planted to MVs continues to expand at an impressive rate. Maize MVs are currently grown on at least 58.8 million ha in developing countries, including at least 21.2 million ha planted to MVs that contain CIMMYT germplasm. The gross value of additional grain production attributable to the adoption of maize MVs in developing countries is estimated to range from US$ 3.7 million to US$ll.l billion per year. Analysis of varietal pedigrees shows that breeders in both the public and private sectors have made extensive use of CIMMYT germplasm. Over 54% of publicly bred MVs released in the developing world since 1966 have contained CIMMYT germplasm. The pedigrees of many privately bred cultivars are confidential, but CIMMYT germplasm was present in 58% of MVs developed by private breeding programs being sold in the late 1990s for which pedigree information is available. The gross benefits attributable to CIMMYT's maize breeding program are estimated to range from US$167 million to US$1.5 billion per year. x, 53 pages 2012-01-06T05:10:14Z 2012-01-06T05:10:14Z 2001 Report 970-648-091-9 http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1035 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Mexico CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
Morris, M.L.
Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
description This report, which updates and extends the findings of an earlier CIMMYT study published in 1994, documents the impacts of international maize breeding research in the developing world. Covering the period 1966-98, the report reviews public and private investment in maize breeding research, describes the products of public and private maize breeding programs, estimates farm level adoption of modern varieties (MVs), and estimates the gross value of additional grain production attributable to international breeding efforts. Although private companies have greatly increased their investment in maize breeding research in recent years, public maize breeding programs still play an important role, especially in breeding for subsistence-oriented farmers. Seed sales data show that the maize seed industry in many developing countries has effectively been privatized and that hybrid seed sales now dominate sales of all other seed types. The area planted to MVs continues to expand at an impressive rate. Maize MVs are currently grown on at least 58.8 million ha in developing countries, including at least 21.2 million ha planted to MVs that contain CIMMYT germplasm. The gross value of additional grain production attributable to the adoption of maize MVs in developing countries is estimated to range from US$ 3.7 million to US$ll.l billion per year. Analysis of varietal pedigrees shows that breeders in both the public and private sectors have made extensive use of CIMMYT germplasm. Over 54% of publicly bred MVs released in the developing world since 1966 have contained CIMMYT germplasm. The pedigrees of many privately bred cultivars are confidential, but CIMMYT germplasm was present in 58% of MVs developed by private breeding programs being sold in the late 1990s for which pedigree information is available. The gross benefits attributable to CIMMYT's maize breeding program are estimated to range from US$167 million to US$1.5 billion per year.
format Report
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
BREEDING METHODS
GERMPLASM
INNOVATION ADOPTION
PUBLIC SECTOR
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
PLANT BREEDING
author Morris, M.L.
author_facet Morris, M.L.
author_sort Morris, M.L.
title Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
title_short Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
title_full Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
title_fullStr Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
title_sort impacts of international maize breeding research in developing countries, 1966-98
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1035
work_keys_str_mv AT morrisml impactsofinternationalmaizebreedingresearchindevelopingcountries196698
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