S20

International Symposium on Berries: New Tools for Crop Improvement

The link button to the abstract submission page (the ROSA platform) is at the bottom of this page.

Conveners

Lisa Wasko DeVetter

Washington State University

Sarah M. Pilkington

Plant & Food Research

Takeshi Kurokura

University of Utsunomiya

Keynote Speakers

David Bryla

United States Department of Agriculture

TBA

Scientific Committee

Stanislaw PlutaPOL; Ebru KafkasTUR; Marina GambardellaCHL; Michael DossettCAN; Dave BrylaUSA; Inger MartinussenNOR; George ManganarisCYP; Hiroyuki ImanishiJPN; Cheng LiuCHN; David PercivalCAN; Nick GouldNZL; Gianluca BaruzziITA; Gianluca SaviniITA; Luca MazzoniITA; Silvia SabbadiniITA; Pedro Brás de OliveiraITA; Piotr LatochaPOL; Iago HaleUSA; Xiujuan QiCHN; Haikonen Tuuli (Luke)FIN; Timo HytönenFIN

Call for Abstracts

Climate change is challenging worldwide production of berry crops. Extremes in heat, cold, and precipitation as well as milder winters that impact chilling accumulation creates production constraints that will have cascading impacts on grower profitability and the availability of quality berries. New tools and techniques are required to maintain and advance sustainable berry production amid climate change. This symposium invites abstracts from individuals and/or research programs conducting basic or applied research on approaches to ensure sustainable berry production within a changing climate. Abstracts may cover a broad range of topics that address this theme including breeding, biotechnology, new sustainable cultivation systems, and environmental stress physiology or physiological aspects that contribute to an improved understanding of these crops. Only abstracts that address this theme within the context of berry crops (e.g., strawberry, Rubus and Ribes species, Vaccinium species, and kiwi) will be considered. Works that are not directly related to the theme currently but contribute to sustainability and a better understanding of crops will be considered.

The following topics will be developed during the symposium:

  • Advancing and maintaining sustainable berry production in a changing climate
  • Berry crops, soft fruits, kiwifruit, kiwiberry
  • Breeding resource, biotechnology
  • Plant protection, production systems
  • Physiology, especially under stress conditions

Submit your abstract

A ROSA registration system is prepared for each symposium. Please access the following link to register your abstract for this symposium.