- CGIAR Research Programme on Roots, Tuber and Bananas gets a blog to go with its Facebook page and Twitter feed.
- Coconut clones? I don’t think so.
- Rice yield gene? I don’t think so.
- NY Times hosts a debate on conservation, and genebanks get a look-in.
- Mongolia’s reindeer herders get some advice.
- “My great grandfather’s legacy is something I grew up knowing and respecting, but my parents’ conservation ethic is something that I have always lived.”
- Marine reserves can be good for fish. And abalone?
Solutions for a cultivated planet
Nibbles: Aphrodisiacs, Food Security, Access & Benefit Sharing, Berry Go Round, Weeds, Restoration Ecology, Opuntia, Sustainable cacao, Innovation
- The rich diversity of aphrodisiac foods. Is it February again?
- Why bother doing it myself when someone else had already stuck the knife in The New Statesman.
- Making the Nagoya Protocol work at the community level. I know, let’s have a meeting. But will the ISF be invited?
- June’s Berry-go-Round botany blog carnival is up, with a few relevancies:
- Weeds revisited and rejoiced in.
- A hero of restoration ecology remembered and refound.
- The prickly pear as metaphor is apt and appropriate.
- How green is the cacao industry? This green.
- Yeah but does it qualify as an innovation system?
Brainfood: Brassica breeding, NUS breeding, Soybean domestication, Bambara groundnut, Jatropha chain, Setaria drought tolerance
- Developing genetic resources for pre-breeding in Brassica oleracea L.: an overview of the UK perspective. Genebanks will set you free.
- Competitive underutilized crops will depend on the state funding of breeding programmes: an opinion on the example of Europe. Divert some subsidies paid directly to farmers to a Europe-wide breeding programme devoted to NUS.
- Analysis of average standardized SSR allele size supports domestication of soybean along the Yellow River. The middle part, to be precise, where it loops north.
- Bambara nut: A review of utlisation, market potential and crop improvement. Need some functioning value chains, for pity’s sake. That’s why previous promotion efforts failed miserably. Not because they’re, well, not that great a crop? In fact they’re drought-tolerant, tasty, nutritious; but difficult to process, prepare. So do market research to inform breeding.
- State-of-the-art of the Jatropha curcas productive chain: From sowing to biodiesel and by-products. Value chains? You want value chains? I’ve got a state-of-the-art one right here.
- Validation of an allele-specific marker associated with dehydration stress tolerance in a core set of foxtail millet accessions. The marker explains about 27% of total variation in dehydration tolerance in a core collection, which is apparently pretty good.
Forests and Trees: Serving the People of Africa and the World
There’s a big forestry meeting going on in Nairobi, with that title. You can see photos. IISD are on it, of course. And ICRAF and others are twittering up a storm.
No matter how much you market it, people have to see value for your product in order to use it. – Onsango KEFRI #ForestPolicy
— CIFOR-ICRAF (@CIFOR_ICRAF) June 28, 2012
How is agriculture being presented? As the enemy, as usual? Or is the “landscape approach” rhetoric gaining purchase? Anyone want to share their impressions with us?