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Related: About this forumMajor global analysis offers hope for saving the wild side of staple food crops
http://www.kew.org/news/global-analysis-saving-the-wild-side-of-food-crops-.htm[font face=Serif][font size=5]Major global analysis offers hope for saving the wild side of staple food crops[/font]
[font size=4]Global efforts to adapt staple foods like rice, wheat and potato to climate change have been given a major boost today as new research shows the whereabouts of their wild cousins. These wild relations could offer beneficial qualities to help major crops become more productive and resilient in the face of future climates and new threats.[/font]
22 Jul 2013
[font size=3]This new analysis assesses 29 of the worlds most important food crops and reveals severe threats to just over half of their wild relatives, as they are not adequately saved in genebanks and not available to researchers and plant breeders for crop improvement.
The three-year study, carried out by the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and managed by the Crop Trust in partnership with Kews Millennium Seed Bank, is the first of its kind to assess, on a global scale, the conservation gaps for crop wild relatives across the most significant crop gene pools. The University of Birmingham researched and developed a comprehensive inventory of these wild crop cousins, providing a foundation for the gap analysis.
This is a major step forward in the global effort to make our food crops more resilient to the effects of climate change, says Andy Jarvis, leader of CIATs Decision and Policy Analysis Research Area, which conducted the research. Crop wild relatives are a potential treasure trove of useful characteristics that scientists can put to good use for making agriculture more resilient and improving the livelihoods of millions of people.
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[font size=4]Global efforts to adapt staple foods like rice, wheat and potato to climate change have been given a major boost today as new research shows the whereabouts of their wild cousins. These wild relations could offer beneficial qualities to help major crops become more productive and resilient in the face of future climates and new threats.[/font]
22 Jul 2013
[font size=3]This new analysis assesses 29 of the worlds most important food crops and reveals severe threats to just over half of their wild relatives, as they are not adequately saved in genebanks and not available to researchers and plant breeders for crop improvement.
The three-year study, carried out by the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and managed by the Crop Trust in partnership with Kews Millennium Seed Bank, is the first of its kind to assess, on a global scale, the conservation gaps for crop wild relatives across the most significant crop gene pools. The University of Birmingham researched and developed a comprehensive inventory of these wild crop cousins, providing a foundation for the gap analysis.
This is a major step forward in the global effort to make our food crops more resilient to the effects of climate change, says Andy Jarvis, leader of CIATs Decision and Policy Analysis Research Area, which conducted the research. Crop wild relatives are a potential treasure trove of useful characteristics that scientists can put to good use for making agriculture more resilient and improving the livelihoods of millions of people.
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Major global analysis offers hope for saving the wild side of staple food crops (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
Jul 2013
OP
joshcryer
(62,276 posts)1. useful characteristics = GMO
Nihil
(13,508 posts)2. Sadly yes, I agree ...
Crop wild relatives are a potential treasure trove of useful characteristics
that scientists can put to good use for profit and, in so doing, infect and/or
out-compete the remaining wild organisms with their untested weeds."