Olea DB

INTRODUCTION

Olive (Olea europaea L.) is the most extensively cultivated fruit crop in the world (FAO, 2004). Its cultivation area has tripled in the past 44 years, passing from 2.6 to 8.5 million of hectares. This emerging appeal is mainly due to the recognized nutritional value of its products combined to its tolerance to drought, salinity etc. Despite this large expansion, intra-specific diversity of olive is threatened by several factors including the abandonment of marginal soils, biotic and abiotic stresses, urbanisation, replacement of old groves with other species and substitution of rustic cultivars with more productive ones. For purposes of conservation and sustainable utilization, it is therefore very important to clearly identify true existing cultivars, their characteristics and the collections in which they are preserved.

In 1998, the first edition of the “Olive Germplasm: Cultivars and World-Wide Collections” was developed by the Istituto per la Valorizzazione del Legno e delle Specie Arboree – Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche and published in collaboration with FAO Seed and Plant Genetic Resources Service (AGPS).

This unique publication was prepared by:

(i) conducting a comprehensive literature review of more than 800 references published in the last 100 years;

(ii) extracting information from these publications on cultivar names, including synonyms and homonyms, essential characteristics (purpose, fertility, productivity, oil content, rooting ability, stress tolerance and biochemical and/or molecular identification), areas of cultivation and genebank collections;

(iii) building a relational database on olive cultivars, which was made available on Internet under the FAO World Information and Early Warning System on Plant Genetic Resources (WIEWS).

In addition, in 2002, FAO published a book on the “Classification, origin, diffusion and history of the olive” to provide updated information on taxonomy, geographical distribution and utilization of this fruit crop.

The 2005 web edition of the “Olive Germplasm: Cultivars and World-Wide Collections” represents an update of the one published in 1998 and includes: information extracted from 1,256 publications; 1,208 cultivar names reported in 52 countries and conserved in 94 collections. In addition, new characteristics such as oil extraction and reactions to additional biotic stresses have also been included, as well as references to biochemical and molecular characterization.

The new 2008 web edition (data bank) of the “Olive Germplasm” constantly updated and corrected, includes data on all the characters published extracted from 1,520 publications which have concerned about 1,250 cultivars in 54 countries and conserved in over 100 collections.

As per the previous edition, my colleagues and I are very grateful to all the friends and colleagues who contributed with their information, advice and views to make this publication possible.

Giorgio Bartolini

Istituto per la Valorizzazione del Legno e delle Specie Arboree – CNR

Florence, Italy

giorgio.bartolini@ibe.cnr.it

OleaDB - Edit in Sesto Fiorentino - Italy from January 2008