Skip to content

Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog

Agrobiodiversity is crops, livestock, foodways, microbes, pollinators, wild relatives …

  • Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Contact

Category: Breeding

Posted on October 24, 2006October 26, 2006

India has rice stuff, rices to occasion

India’s Financial Express has an interesting article on India’s efforts to breed better rice, including by using … gasp … biotechnology!

Posts pagination

Previous page Page 1 … Page 500 Page 501

Fresh Nibbles

    1. Why the modern food system prizes uniformity even though resilience depends on diversity. Spoiler alert: follow the money.
    2. Historic crop varieties are finding renewed relevance as farmers contend with more volatile weather, emerging pests and changing markets. Let’s hope there’s money to conserve them.
    3. India’s traditional wheat varieties contain diversity that could help breeders develop crops better able to withstand heat and drought. Let’s hope there’s money to conserve them.
    4. India announces significant progress in conserving its wild rice genetic resources. Great that there was money to conserve them.
    5. Community seed banks across Kenya are calling for formal recognition and sustained support, arguing that locally managed collections strengthen seed sovereignty, preserve traditional varieties and help farming communities adapt to climate change. Yes, but are they enough without national genebanks?
    6. Researchers are racing to conserve wild coffee species whose genetic diversity may provide the resistance and resilience needed to secure tomorrow’s morning cup. Is the industry contributing, though ?
    7. New history of the macadamia traces its remarkable journey from Australia’s native forests to a global crop, while underscoring why conserving the remaining wild populations is essential for the crop’s long-term future.
    8. Researchers at the University of the South Pacific investigate how taro can withstand climate change, combining research with conservation to help protect one of the region’s most culturally and nutritionally important staple crops.
    9. Chester Zoo collects seeds from highly threatened cacti, because why not?

    Published on July 14, 2026

Updates … delivered

Subscribe in a feed reader

Recent comments

  • Mind the conservation gap – Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog on A brief history of gap analysis for crop diversity conservation
  • Ube careful what you wish for – Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog on No one expects the Spanish Inquisition to help opportunity crops
  • Christelle Rabil on No one expects the Spanish Inquisition to help opportunity crops
  • The wild bunch – Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog on A tale of many breadfruits
  • Angthong National Marine Park on Nibbles: Whiskey, Project design, Australian genebanks, Gender, Books, FAO DG Q&A
Proudly powered by WordPress