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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday June 18 2019, @01:47AM   Printer-friendly
from the just-like-chickens dept.

Grow Faster, Grow Stronger: Speed-Breeding Crops to Feed the Future

Farmers and plant breeders are in a race against time. The world population is growing rapidly, requiring ever more food, but the amount of cultivable land is limited. Warmer temperatures have extended growth seasons in some areas — and brought drought and pests to others.

"We face a grand challenge in terms of feeding the world," said Lee Hickey, a plant geneticist at the University of Queensland in Australia. "If you look at the stats, we're going to have about 10 billion on the planet by 2050 and we're going to need 60 to 80 percent more food to feed everybody. It's an even greater challenge in the face of climate change and diseases that affect our crops that are also rapidly evolving."

[...] Dr. Hickey's team has been working on "speed breeding," tightly controlling light and temperature to send plant growth into overdrive. This enables researchers to harvest seeds and start growing the next generation of crops sooner.

Their technique was inspired by NASA research into how to grow food on space stations. They trick the crops into flowering early by blasting blue and red LED lights for 22 hours a day and keeping temperatures between 62 and 72 degrees Fahrenheit. Last November, in a paper in Nature [DOI: 10.1038/s41596-018-0072-z] [DX], they showed that they can grow up to six generations of wheat, barley, chickpeas and canola in a year, whereas traditional methods would only yield one or two.

On Monday in Nature Biotechnology [DOI: 10.1038/s41587-019-0152-9] [DX], Dr. Hickey and his team highlight the potential of speed breeding, as well as other techniques that may help improve food security. Combining speed breeding with other state-of-the-art technologies, such as gene editing, is the best way to create a pipeline of new crops, according to the researchers.


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  • (Score: 2) by quietus on Tuesday June 18 2019, @10:13PM

    by quietus (6328) on Tuesday June 18 2019, @10:13PM (#857206) Journal

    With that procedure, you would select for plants that grow rapidly under very artificial conditions (artificial lighting, tightly controlled irrigation, chemical nutrition and an unnatural dose of plant growth hormones) -- then plant them out in a normal field. Unless selection suddenly started to work differently, the effects might not be what you would expect.

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