Mine’s a decaff

We’re always on the look-out for examples of the financial value of germplasm collections which don’t involve some obscure and faraway disease, however nasty. So it was really nice to come across a great story about the search for naturally low-caffeine coffee, and in the Wall Street Journal no less. Coincidentally, there was also a blog post yesterday about the wild coffees of Madagascar. ((Yes, dear reader, we nibbled both these things yesterday, but I thought, on reflection, that they were worth a bit more than that.)) Some of the many species found on that island are known to have low caffeine levels, but “[a]ttempts to transfer the caffeine-free property from wild coffee species of Madagascar, which produce an inferior beverage, to C. arabica have failed owing to a strong genetic barrier.”

LATER: I wonder if the recent Korean “land-grab” in Madagascar will have an effect on wild coffees and other interesting endemics.

Nibbles: US, Wheat, Drylands, Cacao, Fast food, Cheese, Dogs

Cassava rules

The IITA public awareness machine must be in overdrive, and it looks like it’s running on cassava. Today

  1. a cassava mosaic project got a namecheck in the Sunday Tribune,
  2. news of a newly released drought tolerant variety got picked up in African Science News Service, and
  3. a meeting on value addition got an article in the wonderfully-named Daily Triumph.

Not that I’m complaining. It’s about time cassava got the attention it deserves in Africa.