Bioversity International is an international nonprofit research-for-development organization focused on the conservation and sustainable use of agricultural and tree biodiversity to improve food security, nutrition, and environmental health.[1] Founded in 1974 as the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR) and headquartered in Rome, Italy, it manages one of the world's largest collections of crop genetic resources, including genebanks for bananas, beans, cassava, and tropical forages.[1][2] In 2019, Bioversity International merged with the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) to form the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT, a unified entity operating within the CGIAR global research partnership.[1]The organization's origins trace back to the need for coordinated global efforts in plant genetic resources conservation amid growing concerns over agricultural biodiversity loss in the mid-20th century.[1] Initially established under the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), it evolved through name changes—becoming the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI) in 1991 and adopting its current name in 2006—to encompass broader work on agro-biodiversity, including forests and wild relatives of crops.[1] The 2019 alliance with CIAT, founded in 1967 in Palmira, Colombia, expanded its scope to integrate tropical agriculture research, creating regional hubs in Nairobi (Africa), Cali (Americas), and Penang (Asia), alongside the Rome headquarters.[1][3] Today, the Alliance employs approximately 2,000 staff across more than 25 offices worldwide, emphasizing cross-disciplinary science to address interconnected global challenges.[3][4]Bioversity International's mission, as part of the Alliance, is to deliver research-based solutions that harness agricultural biodiversity for resilient food systems, tackling climate change, biodiversity loss, malnutrition, and environmental degradation.[5] Guided by its Strategy 2020-2025, the organization conducts research on crop improvement, sustainable farming practices, and policy support, while conserving over 600,000 accessions of seeds and plant materials in secure genebanks. Key activities include developing nutrient-rich crop varieties, promoting agroecological approaches, and partnering with communities and governments to enhance access to diverse, healthy diets—contributing to international goals like the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement.[5] Through these efforts, it supports smallholder farmers and indigenous peoples in over 80 countries, fostering innovation at the nexus of nutrition, environment, and livelihoods.[5]
Overview and Background
Mission and Objectives
Bioversity International was established in 1974 as the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR) with the primary mission to coordinate global programs for the conservation and utilization of plant genetic resources, including initiatives like emergency collecting missions and genebank development.[1] This foundational purpose emphasized international collaboration to safeguard crop diversity essential for agriculture.[1]Over the decades, the organization's objectives have evolved to address broader challenges in agro-biodiversity, incorporating research, policy options, and management practices that enhance food security and build climate resilience in agricultural systems.[1] Key goals include conserving the genetic diversity of crops and trees to prevent loss from environmental pressures, promoting their sustainable integration into farming systems for resilient production, and empowering smallholder farmers in developing countries through access to diverse genetic resources and adaptive practices.[1] These efforts deliver scientific evidence and innovative solutions to harness agricultural biodiversity for healthier diets and sustainable landscapes.[6]Bioversity International aligns its mission with international frameworks, supporting the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the Paris Agreement on climate change, and the Convention on Biological Diversity's global targets for biodiversity conservation.[7] As a member of the CGIAR partnership, it advances research-for-development to transform food systems while mitigating environmental degradation.[7]
Organizational Status and Affiliation
Bioversity International operates as a global non-profit research-for-development organization and an intergovernmental entity within the CGIAR system, benefiting from host country agreements that confer diplomatic privileges and immunities similar to those of international organizations.[8] Established under the framework of CGIAR, it functions as one of the network's research centers dedicated to advancing agricultural science for sustainable development.[7]Its headquarters are located in Rome, Italy, at Via di San Domenico, 1, serving as the primary base for administrative and research coordination, while maintaining a global network of offices.[5] Since November 2019, Bioversity International has been operationally integrated into the Alliance of Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), a strategic partnership that preserves the independent legal status of both entities but establishes unified governance, leadership, and resource sharing.[8] This integration enables Bioversity to focus on biodiversityconservation and utilization as a specialized unit, complementing CIAT's expertise in tropical agriculture through collaborative programs.[1]Established under the CGIAR framework in 1974 as the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR), Bioversity International has been part of the CGIAR since its inception as IBPGR and became an independentCGIAR center in 1994, contributing to the One CGIAR unified structure launched in 2022, which streamlines the consortium's partnerships, knowledge assets, and global presence to address food systems challenges more cohesively.[9] Under this model, it aligns its efforts with CGIAR's overarching goals, sharing research outputs and infrastructure across the network to enhance impact on poverty reduction, nutrition, and environmental sustainability.[7]
Historical Development
Formation and Early Years
Bioversity International traces its origins to the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR), which was established in June 1974 under the auspices of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and with administrative support from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations.[10][11] The creation of IBPGR was a direct response to growing international concerns about the erosion of crop genetic diversity following the Green Revolution, where the widespread adoption of high-yielding modern varieties threatened the loss of traditional farmers' crops and wild relatives essential for future breeding.[12]In its early years, IBPGR focused on building the foundational infrastructure for global plant genetic resourcesconservation, including the establishment in 1975 of the first internationally linked system of genebanks through the Registry of Base and Active Collections.[13] Key activities involved coordinating extensive collection missions to gather germplasm from regions of diversity, sponsoring over 300 such missions in more than 80 countries by the mid-1980s and ultimately supporting efforts in over 100 countries that amassed nearly 200,000 samples by the early 1990s.[14][15] These initiatives emphasized collaboration with national agricultural programs, particularly in developing countries, to ensure that collected materials were duplicated and stored in secure base collections for long-term preservation.A significant milestone in the 1980s was IBPGR's role in fostering the development of an international network on plant genetic resources, in partnership with FAO, which prioritized conservation efforts for major staple crops such as rice, wheat, and potatoes through targeted collecting and evaluation programs.[16] This network built on IBPGR's priority lists of crops and forages, facilitating the integration of germplasm from international agricultural research centers like the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) and the International Potato Center (CIP).[17]Despite these achievements, IBPGR faced initial challenges in securing stable funding from CGIAR donors, with its budget remaining modest at around US$7 million annually by the late 1980s, which limited the scale of operations.[18] Building a robust network of national programs in developing countries proved equally demanding, requiring technical training for local scientists and navigating political sensitivities around germplasm ownership and access, though IBPGR addressed this by sponsoring scholarships and cooperative projects to enhance capacity in these regions.[19][20]
Evolution and Rebranding
In 1991, the organization was renamed the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI) following a restructuring to better emphasize its role in the global conservation and utilization of plant genetic diversity.[1] This change marked a shift toward more integrated international efforts in genetic resource management, building on earlier genebank initiatives without altering the core focus on plant species.[21]During the 2000s, IPGRI expanded its scope to include forest genetic resources and broader agro-biodiversity, recognizing the interconnectedness of agricultural systems with forest ecosystems and the need to conserve genetic diversity beyond cultivated crops.[22] This evolution culminated in the 2006 rebranding to Bioversity International, following the merger with the International Network for the Improvement of Banana and Plantain (INIBAP), to reflect a widened mandate encompassing agricultural biodiversity as a whole for sustainable food systems.[1][21]Key developments in this period included the establishment of partnerships with the Global Crop Diversity Trust in the early 2000s, which provided long-term funding mechanisms for genebank operations and enhanced the security of crop genetic resources worldwide. Bioversity International also advanced research on wild relatives of crops, identifying and conserving genetic traits essential for breeding resilient varieties against climate change and pests.[23] Additionally, the organization played a pivotal role in policy advocacy, influencing the negotiation and adoption of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture in 2001, which facilitated multilateral access and benefit-sharing for plant genetic resources.[24]By 2018, these efforts had scaled up the organization's impact, with Bioversity International managing contributions to genebanks holding over 600,000 accessions of plant genetic resources and maintaining offices in more than 20 countries to support global conservation networks.[25][26]
Alliance Formation and Current Integration
In November 2018, the Boards of Trustees of Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) announced plans to form a strategic alliance, which was officially launched in 2019 to integrate their expertise in agricultural biodiversity conservation and tropical agriculture research.[27][7] This merger aimed to address global challenges such as food security and climate change by combining Bioversity's focus on genetic resources with CIAT's work on resilient cropping systems, creating a unified CGIAR Research Centre.[27]The integration established shared leadership, with Juan Lucas Restrepo appointed as Director General of Bioversity International in March 2019 and subsequently as Director General of the Alliance in 2020.[28] The Alliance adopted a unified Strategy 2020-2030, oriented toward the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, emphasizing research for climate-resilient food systems that enhance nutrition, environmental health, and equitable livelihoods.[29][30]Within the Alliance, Bioversity International leads efforts in biodiversity conservation, managing global genebanks and contributing duplicate seed samples to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault to safeguard crop diversity against threats like climate variability and disasters.[31] It also spearheads agroforestry programs that promote diverse, sustainable land-use systems integrating trees with crops and livestock.[29]As of 2025, the Alliance has expanded digital platforms for genebank data access, including a major update to the open-source Climate Resilience Platform in collaboration with PepsiCo, which added two new crops and six countries to support adaptation in vulnerable regions.[32] Additionally, it is advancing circular economy initiatives, such as the upcoming CircularEconomy4Ghana workshop scheduled for November 27, 2025, to foster collaborations across Africa and Asia.[33]
Governance and Leadership
Governing Bodies
The Board of Trustees serves as the primary governing body for the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT, providing strategic oversight and ensuring alignment with the organization's mission to harness agricultural biodiversity for sustainable food systems. Composed of international experts from diverse sectors including science, policy, and agribusiness, the board includes representatives nominated by CGIAR, host countries (such as Italy and Colombia), and at-large members selected for their expertise, with approximately half from developing countries to reflect global perspectives. As of 2025, the Chair is Julia Marton-Lefèvre, and members include Douglas van den Aardweg, Marion Guillou, Jessica Fanzo, Claudio Lenoci, Ed Mabaya, and Claudia Martinez Zuleta. The board meets twice a year to review progress and make key decisions.[34][35]Key functions of the Board include approving research strategies and policies, allocating budgets primarily funded by CGIAR donors, and fulfilling fiduciary duties such as overseeing financial management, audits, and resource mobilization to support the Alliance's operations. The board also monitors compliance with international treaties, notably the Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and Benefit-Sharing, ensuring that research activities adhere to global standards for equitable benefit-sharing from biodiversity use. Through its executive committee, the board recommends annual budgets and evaluates performance against strategic goals.[35][36]Since the formation of the Alliance in 2019, governance has integrated Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) under a single joint Board of Trustees, replacing their prior independent structures to enhance coordination and efficiency. This hybrid model evolved from Bioversity's origins as the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR), established in 1974 with an initial board focused on genebank coordination, through its independence as the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute in 1991 and rebranding as Bioversity International in 2006. The current structure includes representation from the CGIAR System Organization's Integrated Partnership Board to align with broader global research priorities on food security and climate resilience. The executive leadership, including the Director General, reports directly to the Board for accountability and guidance.[27][1]
Executive Leadership
The executive leadership of Bioversity International, now integrated within the Alliance of Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), is headed by Director General Juan Lucas Restrepo, who has led the organization since March 2019.[28] Restrepo, a Colombian agricultural economist with over 25 years of experience in public and private sector agriculture, oversees the Alliance's overall strategy, emphasizing Bioversity's core expertise in conserving and utilizing agricultural biodiversity to transform food systems.[37] In this role, he manages the implementation of the Alliance's 2020-2030 research and innovation priorities, including partnership development with global stakeholders and reporting to CGIAR's governing structures.[38]Restrepo initially served in a dual capacity as Director General of Bioversity International until the full merger with CIAT in 2020, after which he assumed leadership of the combined Alliance.[39] His tenure was extended for a second term in 2023, reflecting continued focus on biodiversityconservation amid climate challenges.[40]Supporting Restrepo are key associate and regional directors who direct operations across research, regions, and specialized functions. Marcela Quintero serves as Associate Director General for Research Strategy and Innovation since November 2022, leading the consolidation of research agendas on agrobiodiversity, climate adaptation, and multifunctional landscapes while driving fundraising and team integration.[41] Regional leadership includes Maya Rajasekharan as Managing Director for the Americas and Director General of CIAT, overseeing operations and partnerships in Latin America and the Caribbean with a team of over 1,000 staff; Stephan Weise as Managing Director for Asia and interim Director for Partnerships and Communications, managing regional programs in Asia; and Wanjiru Kamau-Rutenberg as Managing Director for Africa, focusing on gender-responsive research and social inclusion in food systems.[42][43][44]Specialized roles include Peter Wenzl as Leader of the Genetic Resources Program and Head of the Future Seeds Genebank in Colombia, responsible for conserving global collections of beans, cassava, and tropical forages to support breeding and research.[45] Vanessa Riveros serves as Head of Human Resources (interim) while serving as Head of Organizational Development, aiding in staff integration and capacity building during Alliance evolution.[34] These leaders collectively ensure alignment with CGIAR oversight by the Board of Trustees, prioritizing biodiversity expertise in global food security efforts.[34]
Research Focus and Programs
Core Research Areas
Bioversity International, as part of the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT, focuses its research on key thematic areas that address the conservation and sustainable use of agricultural biodiversity to support global food systems. These areas encompass strategies to preserve genetic resources amid environmental challenges, enhance access for farmers, and inform policy frameworks that integrate biodiversity into economic and security considerations.[5]A primary focus is agricultural biodiversity conservation, which involves both ex situ and in situ strategies to safeguard crop wild relatives and landraces essential for resilience. The Alliance manages genebanks holding approximately 70,000 accessions of critical crops, including the world's largest collections of beans (over 37,000 accessions), tropical forages (around 22,600 accessions), cassava (nearly 6,000 accessions), and bananas (more than 1,700 accessions of edible and wild species).[46][47] Ex situ conservation occurs through advanced facilities like the Future Seeds genebank in Colombia, which stores seeds, in vitro plantlets, and cryopreserved materials to ensure long-term viability, while in situ efforts emphasize on-farm and natural habitat preservation of wild relatives to maintain evolutionary adaptability.[2] These approaches collectively protect genetic diversity against threats like habitatloss and climate variability.[48]Research on seed systems and access prioritizes equitable distribution and utilization of diverse varieties by smallholder farmers. This includes studies on community seed banks, which serve as decentralized repositories managed by local groups to conserve and exchange farmer-managed varieties, thereby enhancing adaptation to local conditions and reducing dependency on commercial seeds.[49] Bioversity International also investigates benefit-sharing mechanisms under the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA), promoting multilateral access to genetic resources while ensuring equitable returns, such as technology transfer and capacity building, to support sustainable seed systems in developing countries.[50][51]In tree and forest genetics, programs target agroforestry species to bolster ecosystem services and crop resilience. Efforts concentrate on species like cocoa and coffee, evaluating genetic diversity to develop varieties resistant to pests, diseases, and climate-induced stresses such as drought and temperature shifts, which threaten production in tropical regions.[52][53] These initiatives integrate tree genetics into agroforestry systems to improve soil health, carbon sequestration, and farmer livelihoods while preserving forest biodiversity.[54]Policy and economics research examines the integration of biodiversity into broader frameworks for food security, emphasizing the valuation of genetic resources to justify conservation investments. Analyses highlight how diverse genetic materials contribute to nutritional outcomes and economic stability, using tools like payments for agrobiodiversity conservation services to incentivize on-farm preservation of high-value resources.[55] This work underscores the economic benefits of biodiversity, such as reduced vulnerability to shocks and enhanced productivity, informing national policies on sustainable resource management.[56] Through these areas, Bioversity International aligns with the Alliance's emphasis on tropical agriculture to advance resilient food systems.[5]
Major Initiatives and Projects
Bioversity International has maintained a longstanding partnership with the Global Crop Diversity Trust since the early 2000s, focusing on the long-term conservation of crop genetic resources through the deposit of safety duplicates in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.[57] This collaboration supports the backup of seed samples from the Alliance's genebanks, ensuring resilience against threats like climate change and disasters. The vault's holdings now exceed 1.3 million seed samples representing global crop diversity.[58] Additionally, the Alliance has preserved over 60% of the world's banana genetic diversity via cryopreservation at the International Musa Germplasm Transit Centre in Belgium.[59]The Useful Plants Initiative, developed by Bioversity International in collaboration with partners like the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, documents and assesses the conservation status of wild plants with cultural and practical uses across diverse ecosystems.[60] This project has evaluated nearly 7,000 useful wild plant species worldwide, integrating ethnobotanical knowledge to inform conservation strategies in biodiversity hotspots such as the Andes, where it highlights plants vital for indigenous communities' food security and medicine.[61] Adopted as an indicator by the Convention on Biological Diversity in 2019, the initiative uses data from sources like the IUCN Red List to track threats and promote sustainable use, aligning with Bioversity's genebank efforts to safeguard agro-biodiversity.[62]In the realm of climate-smart agriculture, Bioversity International leads projects adapting banana and plantain varieties to environmental stresses in Africa during the 2020s, building on initiatives like the CLISMABAN project that phenotyped biodiversity for resilient traits.[63] These efforts involve collaboration across more than 50 African countries, distributing over 5,000 Musa accessions from Bioversity's International Transit Centre to support local breeding programs for drought and disease resistance.[64] Complementary work includes developing healthy planting material dissemination systems, enhancing smallholder farmers' productivity amid climate variability.[65]Post-2020, Bioversity International has advanced digital sequence information (DSI) tools to facilitate the sharing of genomic data on underutilized crops, addressing benefit-sharing in genetic resource use.[66] Through platforms and policy frameworks developed in partnership with CGIAR centers, these tools enable open access to sequence data from crops like millets and orphan legumes, promoting research on traits for nutrition and resilience while ensuring equitable access for developing countries.[67] This work integrates DSI with traditional genebank data to accelerate breeding of underutilized species, supporting global food system diversification.[68]
Publications and Impact
Key Publications
Bioversity International has published annual reports since its founding as the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR) in 1974, providing detailed overviews of its activities in conserving and utilizing plant genetic resources.[69] These reports, archived in the open-access CGSpace repository, track progress in global genebank management, research collaborations, and policy advocacy. The 2024 Annual Report of the Alliance of Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), formed in 2019, emphasizes the integration of the two organizations' expertise in transforming food systems, including contributions to the UN Biodiversity COP16 negotiations and support for the Global Biodiversity Framework through metrics on agrobiodiversity conservation and sustainable use.[70][71]Among its landmark books, Bioversity International contributed significantly to the Food and Agriculture Organization's (FAO) "The State of the World's Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture," with the first edition in 1998 offering a comprehensive global assessment of plant genetic diversity status, threats, and conservation needs, and the second edition in 2010 updating trends in ex situ and in situ management across countries.[72][73] Another key publication is "Community Seed Banks: Origins, Evolution and Prospects" (2015), co-authored by Bioversity researchers Ronnie Vernooy, Bhuwon Sthapit, and Pitambar Shrestha, which provides a global review of community seed banking practices, drawing on case studies from pioneering countries in Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas to highlight their role in maintaining farmer-managed seed diversity.[74]Bioversity International's researchers have made substantial contributions to peer-reviewed journals, including articles in Crop Science on varietal diversity and breeding strategies, and in Biodiversity and Conservation on agroecosystem resilience.[75] The organization's open-access CGSpace repository, part of the CGIAR system, hosts numerous items encompassing datasets, working papers, and multimedia resources on agrobiodiversity, with the Alliance authoring 1,074 publications in 2022 alone, including 335 journal articles.[76]Policy briefs from Bioversity International address critical implementation challenges, such as the 2017 primer "Mutually Supportive Implementation of the Nagoya Protocol and the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture," which guides national focal points on harmonizing access and benefit-sharing regimes to facilitate seed exchange while respecting sovereignty.[77] Additional briefs explore seed sovereignty themes, including support for community seed banks and farmer seed enterprises to enhance local control over genetic resources, influencing FAO guidelines on sustainable seed systems.[78][79]
Notable Achievements and Contributions
Bioversity International has achieved significant conservation milestones through its management of global genebanks, safeguarding plant genetic resources essential for breeding resilient crop varieties. The organization's International Musa Germplasm Transit Centre maintains over 1,700 accessions of banana and related species, providing virus-free material that has supported the development of disease-resistant cultivars adopted by farmers in tropical regions worldwide.[48] In 2020, the Alliance's bean genebank in Colombia reached a key target by duplicating 90% of its nearly 38,000 accessions to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, enhancing long-term security against climate threats and disasters.[80] These efforts have enabled the distribution of genetic material used in creating drought- and pest-tolerant varieties, such as improved beans that boost yields for smallholder farmers in Latin America.The organization has exerted substantial policy influence, particularly in shaping international frameworks for genetic resource access and benefit-sharing. Bioversity International, through its predecessor the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute, contributed to the drafting and negotiation of the 2001 International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, which facilitates the conservation and sustainable use of crops vital for food security.[25] Ratified by 154 countries as of 2025, the Treaty has promoted multilateral exchanges of over 5 million seed samples since its inception, with Bioversity continuing to support implementation via capacity-building tools and national programs.[81][82]Bioversity International has received notable awards recognizing its genebank management and contributions to sustainable development. More recently, the Agrobiodiversity Index, a tool developed by Bioversity to measure progress toward UN Sustainable Development Goals on biodiversity and hunger, won the 2023 Food Planet Prize, highlighting its role in advancing resilient food systems.[83]Quantitative impacts underscore Bioversity's global influence on food security, with initiatives promoting diversified cropping and resilient varieties benefiting millions of smallholders. Participatory varietal selection programs supported by the organization have covered over 1.5 million hectares, achieving 20-60% productivity gains and enhancing resilience for farmers in Asia and Africa.[84] Additionally, agroclimatic services scaled through Bioversity's partnerships have reached 810,000 farmers across Latin America with climate-adapted solutions, contributing to diversified systems that improve nutrition and reduce vulnerability for an estimated 10 million people in the region as of 2024.[85][4]