Identified gaps for Chickpea (Cicer arietinum)

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32924 registers for chickpea landraces were obtained from The Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN), The European Genetic Resources Search Catalogue (EURISCO) and The CGIAR System-wide Information Network for Genetic Resources (SINGER). Registers are distributed according to their database origin as follows:

 

 

90.9% of all the chickpea accessions selected for the analysis, did not have any geographic information. Significant knowledge gaps (i.e. lack of location information in passport data) can be observed in United States, Mexico, Chile and Iran (see Figure 1). All these areas have both collections and cropped lands, but the limited data availability makes it difficult to assess the extent at which the collection is complete.

 

Figure 1 Total number of accessions (including non-georeferenced accessions) per country and georeferenced accessions (blue dots), using GRIN, EURISCO and SINGER databases.

Approach

As shown below, our approach is composed of three main steps:

 

1. Simple geographic distances and point densities

 

To visualize areas where deficient sampling has been carried out, and thus focus further collecting missions over those areas, an inspection of both the distribution and the geographical frequency of collections of a cropped species was made. First, we calculated the number of accessions in a 300km radius circular neighborhood within a limited geographic space (see Figure 2). This space is defined by the known distribution of the crop (Leff et al. 2004; Monfreda et al. 2008) (Crop distributions surfaces available at the Land Use and Global Environmental Change website of the Department of Geography at McGill University).

 

High density areas (in green colour) can be observed in the Iberian Peninsula, Turkey, Ethiopia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Areas in red are particularly far from collection locations, probably meaning that these areas are underrepresented in ex-situ holdings. Areas in Canada appear as poorly sampled, but this is probably a data-access issue.

 

2. Environmental distances

 

Accessions collection sites were characterized using Worldclim set as environmental layers (Hijmans et al. 2005, available at: http://www.worldclim.org/) to derive 19 bioclimatic indices (Busby 1991) with which a complete characterization of the climate of a place was done (annual trends, seasonality and extremes). Using these environmental data, a function was designed to calculate Mahalanobis distance (Mahalanobis 1936) of the set of points to each of the pixels where the crop is known to be grown (defined by a mask layer).

 

Due to the considerable collinearities between the variables in the set of Bioclim, which might become an issue when calculating Mahalanobis distance, we discarded P5 (maximum temperature of warmest month).

 

When analyzing the environmental representativeness of the chickpea collection (see Figure 3), it appears that several areas that were tentatively found as ‘gaps’ when analyzing only the geographic coverage of collections are represented by some parts of the collection (even if there are no collections in those areas). Areas in Irak, Iran and central Myanmar, where very few accessions have been collected are environmentally represented by other accessions.

 

Figure 3 Environmental representativeness using the Mahalanobis distance

 

3. Selection of sampling areas and areas with gaps

 

Tresholds were selected to determine which areas are not represented enough by the set of accessions. Two tresholds were selected based on statistics (one for the sampling density layer, and the other one for Environmental distances) and used to cutoff both previously calculated surfaces.

 

Results

 

Potential collecting areas in the case of chickpea (yellow to red areas, see Figure 4) are those considered as neither geographically nor environmentally represented in the collection (or in the part of the collection that was assessed).

 

Significant gaps in the collection can be observed in India, eastern Africa and Myanmar.

 

Further collecting efforts for chickpea should be focused in areas where Environmental gaps were identified (since environment is used as a proxy for abiotic traits, such as extreme temperatures, drought, among others). This type of gaps were identified in Ethiopia, Tanzania, Iran, Pakistan, India and Nepal.

 

Figure 4 Potential collecting areas for chickpea landraces

 

Downloads

Total number of accessions per country and georeferenced accessions map
Density of accessions within chickpea cultivated lands within a 300km radius neighborhood
Environmental representativeness using the Mahalanobis distance
Potential collecting areas for chickpea landraces

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