Forestry and agriculture information resources latest

Good news from FAO for all interested in forests and their products:

After much reflection, we have decided to merge the NWFP Digest and Non-Wood News into a single e-publication, which will be distributed quarterly: the present NWFP Update. Whilst possessing many of the same features of its predecessors, we are placing increased emphasis on views and contributions from our readers, with the hope of building a dynamic platform for practitioners to exchange views on NWFPs in the long-run… Finally, we would like to thank Tina Etherington, long-time editor of the NWFP Digest and Non-Wood News who retired last year. Tina provided such momentum to the NWFP “conversation” in previous years through her work and was an inspiration to many.

Happy to add our thanks and congratulations for Tina. You can subscribe from the appropriate FAO Forestry web page.

And since we’re on the subject of data and information, have you heard about agINFRA? It’s all part of this Global Open Data for Agriculture and Nutrition (GODAN) thing. :

agINFRA is pioneering the connection of Agricultural Data through an Open and Participatory Data Infrastructure. Our website is here to provide you with everything you need to know to discover exciting new developments in the field and get yourself or your organization involved.

So now you have no excuse.

Online apple breeding

Luigi noticed an interesting proposal to set up an online apple-breeding programme. Sean Myles, Canada Research Chair in Agricultural Genetic Diversity at Dalhousie University, Halifax, says that government and industry are getting out of apple breeding because traditional methods are “too expensive and risky”. So he wants to pull together an alternative. The idea isn’t fully fleshed out yet, and that’s the point, because this is just one idea that will be pitched during a “48 hour idea lab” to refresh the food scene in the Annapolis valley in Nova Scotia, Canada.

It takes place in 10 days time — 17-19 January — and sounds very cool indeed. Given the preponderance of new media types who will be attending, I’m sure there will be no shortage of online reporting. But if anyone there wants to do us a write up, that would be welcome.

As welcome as a decent downloadable apple.

While we were gone …

… there was a long discussion of some important minutiae concerning the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, all occasioned by a little footnote in a learned paper. The footnote sought to “point out the tensions involved” in “motivations for distributing multilateral system PGRFA to non-ITPGRFA members”.

Lovers of alphabet soup will find much there to feast on, as will historians of the Treaty and its antecedents. Thanks to all who contributed. A nagging counterfactual remains: would there have been that much discussion had the footnote been incorporated in the body of the paper? I guess we’ll never know.

Brainfood: Tea flower transcriptomics, Ag origins, Hunan rice, ITPGRFA & CBD, Mycorrhiza, Sugar beet breeding, Agronomy, Molecular domestication, Cactus domestication, Rice yield gene

Brainfood: Chinese heritage sites, Chinese farmer coops, Seasonal foods, Agroforestry markets, Quinoa roadmap, Swedish pseudo-coffee, Barley phylogenetics, Switchgrass diversity, Italian maize composition, European forest vulnerability