
| February 16, 2009 | Monday | Safar 20, 1430 |
CHICAGO, Feb 15: Farmers and plant breeders around the globe are planting thousands of endangered seeds as part of an effort to save 100,000 varieties of food crops from extinction.In many cases, only a handful of seeds remain from rare varieties of barley, rice and wheat whose history can be traced back to the Neolithic era, said Carey Fowler of the Global Crop Diversity Trust.
“If we don’t do the job right, they are gone,” he said in an interview. The effort, which Fowler thinks is the biggest biological rescue attempt ever undertaken, is aimed at rescuing seeds stored under less-than-optimal conditions in underfunded seed banks as well as those threatened by human and natural disasters.
Rescuers hope to preserve seed samples that might provide genetic traits needed to fight disease or address climate change.—Reuters
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