Complementary potato conservation in the Parque de la Papa

IMG_5434I was in South America for the past couple of weeks, which is why blogging has been, well, slow. One of the places I visited was the Parque de la Papa, or Potato Park, near Cusco in Peru, thus fulfilling a long-standing ambition. The Parque brings together six local communities around the imperative to conserve local potato diversity, both wild and cultivated, and use it sustainably. They raise money through ecotourism, including a restaurant serving local delicacies, but also through action research projects. One of the more important things that’s been happening is the “repatriation” of virus-free landraces from the genebank of the International Potato Centre (CIP), including with support from the International Treaty.

IMG_5224CIP staff have also been training local people in the production of botanical seed, as part of a project implemented by the Asociación ANDES with support from the Global Crop Diversity Trust. The seed is being stored in a community genebank, but will be safety duplicated at CIP, and hopefully also eventually in Svalbard. The photo shows Pedro doing a demonstration of how seeds are extracted from fruits for storage. The guy on the right is Alejandro Argumedo of ANDES. Really good to see ex situ and on farm conservation working together and complementing each other, as they should.

Nibbles: Old pretzel, Wine podcast, Nordic podcast, Tea history, Pacific pests app, Eating bugs, Chicken history, African superfoods, Gender, Access to seeds, Sorghum beer, Making mead, Cumin, Bolivian school meals, MLN, Hidden hunger conference, CIP & IK, Potato Park, CIP’s Sawyer, Saving wheat, Resettlement, Sustainable cacao, Deforestation map, Language map

Again, sorry for slow blogging last week. Work, you know. Here we play catch-up.

Nibbles: Berlin blueberries, Science hubris, Purple tea, Soil, Bushmeat, Maize breeding, Ukranian salo

  • Must get myself a blueberry comb come next autumn.
  • What do scientists do in response to GMO fears? “Trust us.”
  • Purple tea in Kenya? Must look out for it.
  • Real farmers do it on the soil.
  • Bushmeat can be good for you.
  • Private sector uses public sector genebank. You didn’t build that.
  • Salo is when nobody fucks with you and you’ve got a bit of money.”

Nibbles: Wine & CC, Native American food, Olives in Crete & Palestine, Adopt-an-Alpine-Cow, Landscape terms, Gates investments, African smallholder advice

Nibbles: Citrus greening, Deforestation, OFSP, Sugarbeet breeding, Poverty & conservation, Indian tribals, Eat This Podcast, Musalit, Solomon Island bananas, Potato somaclonal variation, Genebank data management, WorldVeg DG search