- Watching hens eat – and gaining insights into food production.
- EU Commissioner for Environment explains the importance of biodiversity in agriculture.
- How to choose a duck breed for your farm.
- More money for the Biodiversity Heritage Library. They’re on Flickr too.
Moroccan wheat additions to the global genepool
There are times when the whole social media buzz conversation engagement thang is a bit overwhelming. Like today. I saw an item from FAOCrops on Facebook, which said “The gene pool of the Treaty gets 351 Moroccan wheat accessions from a benefit-sharing Fund project“. That’s interesting, I thought. It was attached to a photo, presumably of a Moroccan examining wheat, and offered to let me continue reading. Which I did. Now Facebook links can be very hard to access even if you’re already a member (and not everyone is), and indeed that link takes you to all FAOCrops’ photos. I’ve no idea how to link to just one of them. However, at the end of the extended photo caption is another link. That, alas, just takes you to a PDF of a letter to the Secretariat of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, which contains very little truly interesting information beyond the details of the accessions. So here, to save you the frustration I felt, is a copy of the Facebook story:
The gene pool of the Treaty gets 351 Moroccan wheat accessions from a benefit-sharing Fund project
The global gene pool of the International Treaty received this week 351 new wheat accessions that have been evaluated during the life of a Benefit-sharing Fund project implemented in Morocco, as announced by the National Agriculture Research Institute of this country.
This is the first time that the Multilateral System is enlarged with material generated by a project of the Benefit-sharing Fund of the Treaty. In particular, the project helped in the evaluation of selected accessions held at INRA and the collection and evaluation of new landraces through a participatory process that joined the efforts of researchers and farmers.
The 195 durum wheat and 156 bread wheat accessions can now be shared through the Standard Material Transfer Agreement.
“For the first time since the entry into force of the International Treaty, this moment marks the completion of the full circle between the facilitated access mechanisms of the Treaty and the benefit-sharing under the Treaty’s Multilateral System and its Benefit-sharing Fund”, said Dr. Modibo Traoré, Assistant Director-General of the Agriculture and Consumer Protection of FAO.
“This work goes beyond regular conservation of genetic diversity”, said the Secretary of the International Treaty, Dr. Shakeel Bhatti, “as we know that some of this genetic material will contribute to the global efforts against the UG99, a fungus that attacks wheat and that has caused serious production losses in Africa and the Middle East for more than a decade”.
Detailed documentation and evaluation
Many of the collected varieties come from on-farm conservation and quite a large number of observations have been documented during the collection process such as yield, biomass, height, maturation rate, grain size or color.
During the collecting and evaluation missions, scientists also gathered information from farmers about local names, origins of seeds, any pre-sowing treatments, length of use, preferred characteristics, and any resistance or tolerance they had observed. In addition, scientists and farmers screened and selected the samples independently, and then compared their results in order to improve the quality of information generated by the project.
The material is conserved in the collection held by INRA and the Regional Agricultural Research Centre of Settat, in western Morocco. The Secretariat of the International Treaty has published the notification sent by INRA and detailed information on the accessions on its new website.
The Director of the National Research Institute has also informed the Secretary that the material belonging to Annex 1 crops of the International Treaty and held at the Moroccan Genebank is also incorporated in the Multilateral System and available under the Standard Material Transfer Agreement. The Moroccan Genebank conserves today 48 000 accessions, representing 91 genera of 403 different species.
Nibbles: Goats, Seed Fairs, Banana genebank, Prunus africana plans, Forage grass, English food, Talking heads
- USAID and partners to probe African goat breeds for performance measures.
- FAO sings the praises of its seed fairs in South Sudan.
- Bioversity’s banana genebank gets a big write-up.
- Prunus africana, the aged gentleman’s friend, could also be the Kenyan farmers’ friend. In about 40 years time. If we start now.
- And speaking of domestication, efforts to tame Panicum turgidum as a new forage grass are under way.
- It wasn’t industrialisation that made English food bad, no matter what a Nobel Laureate may think.
- All that #abdchat, just in case you missed it live.
Nibbles: New genebank, Urban ag, Cassava, Justice, School gardens
- Good news from Russia: A genebank in the permafrost. Yup, another one.
- Good news from Guatemala: Urban gardens for health and wealth.
- Good news from West Africa (which we know is not a country): magic cassava.
- Good news from Brazil: the World Congress on Justice, Governance and Law for Environmental Stability will prevent empty promises being made at Rio+20.
- Good news from the US: the Edible Schoolyard Project is online with scads of fun stuff for children and their teachers everywhere.
Russia sees benefits in joining the International Seed Treaty
A very brief announcement on The Voice of Russia website says that Russia “is planning” to join the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. Deputy Minister of Agriculture Alexander Petrikov explained that Russia will benefit because it will “acquire access to samples of 22 food and 29 feeding crops, which it needs for its food security.”
Our Man who Knows the Treaty Inside Out says that genetic resources “under the management and control” of the government are automatically included in the Treaty. ((What does that mean? See here.)) So the rest of the world benefits by getting access to Russia’s holdings that meet those conditions. But, there’s no obligation on the host to maintain plant genetic resources.
“They can let them wither and die,” said Our Man. So don’t hold your breath for Pavlovsk.