Nibbles: Drought, Vegetable talks, Bees, Communications, Resilience, Fungi, Breadfruit tools, Taxonomy, Orphan crops, ICARDA

Nibbles: Bananas, Banana genome, Moringa, Hunger games, Deforestation, Digital herbarium, NTFP in Tanzania, CC in Tanzania, CC in Nepal, CC and Ceanothus, Potatoes, Fellowships, Fermentation

AVRDC’s shiny new website

AVRDC has a nice new website. You can subscribe to a couple different newsletters, and also follow the institute on Facebook and Twitter. You can buy a porcelain coffee mug and donate money. And there’s a decent RSS feed at last. The first thing that popped up when I subscribed to it was, almost inevitably, a fact sheet on the baobab. Yet another fact sheet on the baobab. Incidentally, I know I’ve already nibbled this, but also newly online is CABI’s Plantwise Knowledge Bank, an “online resource with information for all involved in plant health.” Where, almost inevitably, you can get information on the baobab.

Trees of Life: The book of the movie

Prof. Roger Leakey’s book, Living with the Trees of Life: Towards the Transformation of Tropical Agriculture, the publication of which we trailed way back in January, is now officially out. You can get it from the CABI Bookshop. I know I will. Here’s how Prof. Leakey describes the rationale for the book in the media release:

We need a fresh approach both to food production and the use of natural resources if we are to avoid the emerging food crises expected to impact every country in the world by the middle of this century. We need to rehabilitate degraded land, diversify farming systems and protect watersheds… Few people realize the vast untapped wealth of the genetic variation that is present in trees. The development of tree crops can create local business opportunities and employment. In some cases there is the potential to support a whole range of new industries – this time however, poor people in developing countries must benefit.

Interestingly, Faidherbia albida, a photo of which graces the ICRAF post on the book, seems not to be one of Prof. Leakey’s Trees of Life. ((And neither, probably, are the ones illustrated here, but anyway.)) Not sure if cashew is, but Kew’s Wolfgang Stuppy certainly seems to have a thing for it.

Nibbles: Pollinator book, Museums, Quinoa and celiac disease, Plant growth analysis, Mangroves, Plant health