A new breeding selection criterion for me: football bounce in turf breeding programme, Nanjing Inst Botany, Jiangsu https://t.co/1TDdXekCWo
— Pat Heslop-Harrison (@Pathh1) August 7, 2017
The first national botanical garden in China, apparently.
Agrobiodiversity is crops, livestock, foodways, microbes, pollinators, wild relatives …
A new breeding selection criterion for me: football bounce in turf breeding programme, Nanjing Inst Botany, Jiangsu https://t.co/1TDdXekCWo
— Pat Heslop-Harrison (@Pathh1) August 7, 2017
The first national botanical garden in China, apparently.
A few days ago the European Commission published its “List of demarcated areas established in the Union territory for the presence of Xylella fastidiosa as referred to in Article 4(1) of Decision (EU) 2015/789” and the news is not good for Corsica, the Balearics and assorted other areas.
A good summary of the story ((Which we’ve blogged about a couple of times here.)) so far, and what’s in store for us, can be found on Small Things Considered in the form of a translation from the Catalan of a blog post by Mercè Piqueras.
A conference on European research into Xylella fastidiosa is to be held in Palma de Mallorca, in the Balearic Islands, in 13-15 November 2017. Experts on Xylella from Europe and other parts of the world will participate in the meeting. These include Alexander Purcell, Rodrigo Almeida and Mathieu Vanhove, from the University of California-Berkeley, Carlos Chacón, from the University of Costa Rica, and Helvecio De La Coletta-Filho, from the Instituto Agranomico-Centro de Citricultura, Brazil.
Meanwhile, nurseries are mounting their own private Brexit.
That’s according to Bill Gates, on his visit to The Bread Lab. May come as a surprise to CIMMYT and ICARDA, and to their partners at TraitGenetics. Or to the bunch of Italian farmers Jeremy interviewed for the latest Eat This Podcast. Or to everyone at the Land Institute and elsewhere working on perennial wheat. Maybe Mr Gates meant at his Foundation.