Nibbles: Organic breeding, Agroforestry, Metallophytes, Fermentation, Grain storage

  • Meta-analysis or no meta-analysis, breeders still want to breed for organic conditions.
  • Farm Radio does tree farming.
  • A plea for metallophytes. Every damn plant group has a lobby these days. I bet some of them are crop wild relatives though.
  • As does almost every style of food preparation. Although I have to say I myself can never read enough about fermentation.
  • This video is advertised as being about food preservation, and I was going to link it to the above, but it turns out to be about seed storage. Which is interesting enough, and important too, but not the same thing. A clever video, which I personally think doesn’t in the end make its point.

Nibbles: Irish Famine book, Breeding for adaptation, Neolithic diets, Randy Thaman, Ecological Babylon, IPR for smallholders, Botanical gardens

  • Don’t underestimate the importance of a new book on the Irish Famine, despite the weird construction used in praising it.
  • Impossible to overestimate the importance of crop breeding for climate change adaptation. And would you like a presentation with that?
  • Cannot underestimate the diversity of early Neolithic diets. No, wait.
  • Difficult to overestimate the contribution made by Prof. Randy Thaman to the conservation of agrobiodiversity in the Pacific. One of several honoured by IUCN for services to conservation.
  • Fed up with linguistic tricks? Well, too bad, because here’s another one. It turns out you can use agricultural biodiversity terminology as examples to explain what’s wrong with ecology.
  • Here we go again. Easy to underestimate the importance of IPR legislation in enabling smallholders to conserve agrobiodiversity.
  • Plain impossible to list the x best botanical gardens in the world.

Nibbles: IUCN conference tweep, ICARDA move, Adaptation stories, Branding and market chains, Tree farming

Where Kasalath rice landrace really comes from

The conversation about Kasalath rice continues, with some actual information about the accession in question. The back story has kinda sorta made its way into the mainstream media too. Reuters published the picture below yesterday (30 August).

A scientist locates the rice variety kasalath inside the gene bank at the International Rice Research Institute in Los Banos, Laguna

“A scientist locates the rice variety kasalath inside the gene bank at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in Los Banos, Laguna, south of Manila August 30, 2012. A team of scientists from the IRRI, led by Sigrid Heuer, say that they have discovered a gene called PSTOL1, or Phosphorous Starvation Tolerance, which increases grain production by 20 percent by enabling rice plants to grow stronger root systems for better intake of phosphorus, an important but limited plant nutrient. The discovery will help poor rice farmers grow more rice for sale, even while working on phosphorus-deficient land, according to Heuer.”

I guess we’ll just have to take Reuters’ word that the scientist is indeed locating Kasalath and not some other sample.