- Object Analysis of the Giant Pumpkin. Just in time for Halloween, obviously.
- The Need to Save Seeds is a Bad Sign. Because it means you’re not using great seed that’s worth paying for. Listen, we just link to this stuff, OK?
Nibbles: Frogs, Spuds, Apples, Cucumbers, Tosh?
- Take that, you cheese-eating surrender monkeys. England boasts oldest eaten anuran legs.
- Ban potatoes NOW! You know it makes sense.
- As American as industrially harvested, intellectually protected apples.
- Step aside Golden Rice; the Golden Cucumber is just over the horizon. That and much more from deep re-sequencing.
- Also just over the horizon, hordes of new, public domain banana varieties, although they don’t actually own the domain the video points to. Oops. h/t Bifurcated Carrots.
Nibbles: Straw, Straw man, Synthetic straw man, Burning straw man, Banana diversity, Perennial grains, Right to Food, Fibrous meatballs, Fermentation, Colombian music
- There’s a straw shortage? Well, of course there is.
- And this week’s prize for most straw-clutching headline goes to “Mathematical study of photosynthesis clears the path to developing new super-crops”.
- On the other hand, why bother mimicking C4 when you could just reinvent photosynthesis?
- Speaking of C4, maybe less US maize will be turned into fuel next year.
- The “portal” to the diversity of bananas gets an update. But don’t go looking for plantains.
- Perennial grains still under discussion.
- The Right To Food and Nutrition Watch – a name to sow confusion – has made its 2013 articles available.
- Nutrition, these days, means adequate fibre, so of course the natural way to do that is to add citrus fibre to meatballs. Smacks forehead.
- Science Friday does fermentation, with nutritional benefits.
- And a little something for the weekend: Colombian artists sing in solidarity with farmers. Waiting for a review from Our Man in Cali.
Nibbles: Food sovereignty, Calories, Fortilizers, Barley, Climate changed coconuts, Global hunger index, Halloween food, World Food Day
- Native tribes in the US want more food sovereignty.
- People underreport the calories they consume shock. Research sponsored by Coke not a shock.
- For nutritionally fortified food, fortify the fertilizers first.
- German scientists working round to clock to decipher barley DNA and save Oktoberfest from climate-induced drought.
- Climate change, however, is a double-edged sword for coconuts in Guyana.
- 2013 Global Hunger Index says world hunger remains “serious”.
- Is all that scary enough to put you off your food?
- Relax, it’s World Food Day, everything’s gonna be alright.
A very special day
Today is Ada Lovelace Day, an annual celebration of women in science, technology, engineering and maths. It is also, I am reliably informed, Cake Decorating Day. No room, then, for sentimentality, but I must note that today is also the 7th anniversary of this website.
As we reported in 2006, Typhoon Xangsane had damaged the National Plant Genetic Resources Laboratory in the Philippines, but left IRRI’s genebank unscathed.
Seven years on, genebanks are still at risk, although there are also safety duplicates in the frozen wastes. And we’re still trying to keep up with agricultural biodiversity in all its many manifestations.
A few things have changed, too. Behind the scenes, we’ve had our ups and downs with our web host, who unilaterally terminated what we thought was a lifetime contract. And, as you might expect, we’ve both moved on in one sense or another from where we were back in 2006.
Let me, though, ask one favour of you, dear reader: is there anything you either like or dislike, that you would like to see more or less of? Leave a comment. We can’t promise, but we can try.
And thanks for reading.