Brainfood: Benin diversity, Catalan diversity, Serbian sorghum, Flowering in barley and sunflower, Potato nutritional quality, Cacao genebank management, Potato genebank management, Caribbean cattle, Venezuelan CWR, Ecogeographic surveys, Refugia, Vegetation change, Fisheries, Botanic gardens, Crop diversity patterns, Old trees

Roads not taken

Glasshouse at Chelsea Physic Garden
The BBC has a history of botany, but it’s not available in my area, despite the fact, pointed out by my friend Michael, that the Beeb’s motto is “Nation shall speak peace onto nation.” And the Save Our Species coalition puts out a call for proposals for Threatened Species Grants and Rapid Action Grants. But plants, let alone crop wild relatives, are not eligible (at least for now). Don’t you wish sometimes that you’d just stayed in bed?

How to conserve animal genetic resources

And speaking of eloquent images, here’s another one, this time from the world of animal genetic resources conservation.

Ooops, no, that’s not the one I meant. It was this one:

Which comes from the draft FAO Guidelines for the In Vivo Conservation of Animal Genetic Resources. Lots more details there. Via CGN.

Featured: Coconut map

Hugh Harries has a bone to pick with some lines on a map:

…Sailing ships, like floating coconuts, go with winds and tides. The introduction of coconut into the Atlantic and Caribbean by the Portuguese was via the Cape Verde islands not the Gulf of Guinea and annually, for more than 200 years, the Spanish carried hundreds of people and thousands of coconuts from the Philippines to the west coat of America (from Mexico to Peru) by a north Pacific route avoiding any islands…