Nibbles: Poleward migration, Pulse infographic, Vodka, Ancient horse DNA, Old fish, Certified cacao, On farm book, Coarse millets, Banana diversity, Pearl millet demo

Varietal diversity in pulse nutritional quality to be documented, maybe even used

Good to see FAO taking the lead in pulling together nutritional data on pulses, in celebration of the International Year of Pulses. Especially since variety-level information will be sought, according to FAO Nutrition Officer Ruth Charrondière .

…if a micronutrient deficiency is identified within a certain region or population, governments and nutritionists can pinpoint the varieties of pulses that contain the highest levels of the micronutrients, and encourage their production on farms and home gardens in these areas. Governments can also use the data to enrich food based dietary guidelines and national food composition tables. Furthermore, researchers and the private sector can use the food composition data to develop new, nutrient-rich varieties of pulses through cross-breeding and selective breeding, and include these improved varieties in mass production programmes.

There is demand for that sort of thing.

Brainfood: Cajanus breeding, Saline rice, Temperate perennial fodder, Andean beans, Seed microbes

Multiplying rice

Speaking of genebank multiplication plots, I’m told this is the best time of year to stroll through rice ones, and get an idea of the diversity on display. Here’s the evidence, courtesy of our friends at IRRI.

rice plots

The genebank tries to alternate early- and late-maturing varieties when regenerating accessions, as you can clearly see from this Google Earth shot from March last year, half way through the harvest (the coordinates are 14.15°N 121.26°E, in case you want to check for yourself, and here’s the kmz file).

IRRI multiplication plots

Meanwhile, the Nordic genebank is struggling with its multiplication.

Nibbles: Solutions edition

  • No new salinity tolerance in cereals? You need to look at the right thing.
  • No new crops? Focus on plants’ sex lives.
  • No hope for drylands? Look to biodiversity.
  • No new agricultural land? No problem.
  • No data on neglected Himalayan crops? Got you covered.
  • No way you’re drinking coffee from civet droppings? Chemistry to the rescue.
  • No place for the offspring of F1 hybrids in your agriculture? Go apomictic.
  • No new fruits left to try? Hang in there.
  • No diversity in your Aragonese homegarden? There’s a genebank for that.
  • No impact for your agricultural research. Try clusters.
  • No agroecological patterning to your crop’s genetic diversity? It’s the culture, stupid.