An experiment on cassava degeneration, Twitter-style

IITA plant virologist James Legg asks:

Cassava mosaic virus disease & Cassava brown streak virus disease constrain production throughout East & Central Africa, but do the effects get worse if farmers keep recycling planting material?

Yes, right?

Well, it’s more complicated than that. Spoiler alert:

1. Degeneration is most clear in resistant varieties as it happens slowly
2. Virus-free planting material gives greater yield gains than extreme resistance
3. BUT, virus-free material has no value for highly susceptible varieties

But read how they got there.

Brainfood: Makapuno, Middle Eastern dogs, Date palm origins, Speedy NUS, Red apples, Apple characterization, Phenotyping double, Assisted migration & pathology, Soya diversity, Sustainable intensification, Seed research, Cucurbita history, Potato value chains, Livestock ES

DOI DIY

Remember when we told you that you could comment on the draft guidelines for the use of DOIs in plant genetic resources conservation and use? Well, I hope you did, because now they’re out, thanks to the Seed Treaty’s work on developing a Global Information System. Here’s one of the authors, in case you were wondering. And on the same website, that of the Genebank Platform, you can also find out about how his, and the other CGIAR genebanks, are implementing DOIs.

Nibbles: Australian wheat, Heirloom apple, Olive trouble, The Queen’s Mulberries, Watermelon breeding, Phancy phenotyping, Chefs & NUS, Cacao origins