Brainfood: Spanish terraces, Flower patches, Population ecology, Maize germplasm use, Seed info system, Maize and CC, Medicago predation, Species richness prediction, Rice salt-tolerance

Coconut talk

A commenter posted a link to an interview with Dr Richard Markham, a research programme manager for the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, on the threat to the international coconut collection in Papua New Guinea. I’m sharing the link here in case you didn’t notice it in the comments and would like a slightly more sober assessment of the threat than has been available elsewhere. Listen as he fends off a sensationalising journalist. And for those whose bandwidth will not easily allow them to hear Dr Markham’s dulcet tones, there’s a full transcript.

Brainfood: Sierra Leone rice, Bean breeding, Cacao geographic diversity, Red fleshed apples, Species richness & productivity, African maize diversity, Human expansion, Barley gaps, Wild coffee and CC, Acacia and CC, Genetic erosion

Mapping joy

Our friends at CIAT are bursting with pride; at a workshop they are testing cloud technology for sharing geographic information. All I can say is that it seems to work, and that the mappers are pleased with the drawing speeds. The rest is beyond my technical chops, although if you had the skills, you could probably do something clever like add the distance to the nearest cassava processing factory. Or something.

Never rains but it pours

As it turns out, climate change is not the only thing coffee has to contend with in East Africa. There’s the Coffee Berry Borer too. Integrated pest management is showing some promise, but, as a comment on a recent Plantwise post reminds us, the effect of climate change on the pest is “forecasted to worsen in the current Coffea arabica producing areas of Ethiopia, the Ugandan part of the Lake Victoria and Mt. Elgon regions, Mt. Kenya and the Kenyan side of Mt. Elgon, and most of Rwanda and Burundi.” That’s for the crop, of course, and things may not be so bad for wild trees, for micro-environmental if not genetic reasons. But you never know.