Would you like to know where the CGIAR has agrobiodiversity projects in Africa? Ok, then, check out the new beta of the Ongoing Research website. The map on the website, unlike the screenshot below, is interactive. Via.

Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog
Agrobiodiversity is crops, livestock, foodways, microbes, pollinators, wild relatives …
Would you like to know where the CGIAR has agrobiodiversity projects in Africa? Ok, then, check out the new beta of the Ongoing Research website. The map on the website, unlike the screenshot below, is interactive. Via.

We had an email from Yvonna Tan alerting us to the Ashoka Changemakers competition for innovative solutions to improve nutrition. Yvonna wanted us to recommend her project to our readers, but we’re uncomfortable doing that. There are lots of great-sounding projects in the list, from fake goats to vegetable gardens. So while we’re greatful to Yvonna for poking us, we’ll leave you to choose the projects you want to support. You have to register, and that requires responding to an email, so it is a bit time-consuming. But the winning project gets $5000 so you might consider it time well spent. You have till 8 February.
I think I have already pointed out that Nigel Chaffey does an entertaining round-up of botanically themed items from the world’s media on every issue of Annals of Botany. The latest one has three stories — on training, innovation and information — of great relevance to some of our recurring obsessions here at the Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog.
The USDA’s National Agricultural Library has a bunch of “special collections” which are really just that — special. For example, check out the USDA Pomological Watercolor Collection. Here’s a taster, the Arkansas Black.
