Nibbles: Cacao, Soil mapping, Rice terraces, Maize, Cereus
- “USDA’s Bourlaug International Science Fellows Program has partnered with non-profit and for-profit organizations to identify new agricultural techniques for cocoa cultivation and to control cocoa diseases.” And do some conservation and breeding, surely.
- Big shots call for a decent global digital soil map. Seconded.
- Cool photos of rice agricultural landscapes.
- Roasting maize, Mexico style. Oh yeah, there’s also a nifty new maize mapping population out.
- Peruvian apple cactus doing just fine in Israel.
Nestlé Prize in Creating Shared Value
Do you have an idea which “has high promise of improving rural development, improving nutrition, improving access to clean water, or having a significant impact on water management”? You do? It better involve the use of agrobiodiversity. Anyway, NestlĂ© would like to hear from you.
Conference roundup
We’ve mentioned all of these before, probably multiple times, but let’s do it again. There are two important global conferences coming up in late August.
- 1st International IFOAM Conference on Organic Animal and Plant Breeding
- 2nd World Congress on Agroforestry
Then later in the year there’s another humdinger. It’s like a perfect agrobiodiversity gabfest storm.
As ever, we’re very happy to hear from participants, either as it happens or after the dust settles.
More on that new Turkish genebank
You may remember a post a few weeks back on a new genebank being planned by the Turkish government, about which I had some questions. Well, Agriculture & Rural Affairs Minister Mehmet Mehdi Eker will kick off building work on July 30. ((Actually the article says June 30 but its use of the future tense makes me think that’s a typo.)) In a statement, the Ministry said:
…we need to assess the current situation in order to protect our biological diversity and genetic sources. There are about 10 thousand plant species and nearly 3 thousand endemic plant species in Turkey. Also, Turkey is considered a center to find genes of a number of plant species which are of great importance for biological researches. Therefore, we decided to establish a seed gene bank in Turkey. The bank will contain genes of 250 thousand plant species.
I suppose that means 250,000 accessions. It sounds to me like this genebank may concentrate on wild species, unlike the one in Izmir. But I’m not sure. Maybe someone out there will give us more details.