Glossary > Varietals & Genetics > Backcrossing

Backcrossing

Varietals & Genetics

In Simple Terms

Backcrossing is how breeders gradually build a coffee plant that's both disease-resistant and good in the cup. You take a tough, resistant hybrid and keep crossing it back with a high-quality parent, generation by generation, until the offspring tastes great and stays healthy.

What is backcrossing in coffee breeding?

Backcrossing is a breeding technique where a hybrid is crossed back with one of its parent varieties. In coffee it's used to progressively recover the flavour quality of a traditional Arabica parent while keeping the disease resistance introduced by a resistant parent such as Híbrido de Timor.

The typical sequence: cross a high-quality Arabica with a disease-resistant parent to get a rust-resistant hybrid. That hybrid may cup poorly - too much Robusta influence. Cross it back with the high-quality Arabica parent. The offspring recover more Arabica character while retaining some resistance. Repeat across multiple generations, selecting for desired traits at each step.

Castillo - Colombia's most widely planted cultivar - is the product of five backcross generations starting from a Caturra × HdT cross. Each generation took time (coffee trees need three to four years to fruit), which is why developing a commercially viable cultivar takes decades. Backcrossing is the patient, methodical work that most of the world's rust-resistant specialty coffees are built on.