A major seed bank in Aleppo, Syria, holds genes that might help researchers breed crops to survive climate change. But the conflict tearing the country apart has rendered the bank largely inaccessible for the past four years. Now an effort to duplicate its seed collection at more-accessible locations is ramping up.
On 29 September, the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), which runs the bank in Aleppo, officially launched a sister bank in Terbol, Lebanon, which now hosts 30,000 duplicates. Together with a new bank in Rabat, Morocco, it will make thousands of seeds available to researchers.
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Seed banks function as bank accounts for plant genes. Collectors deposit seeds, which can later be 'withdrawn' to replenish crops lost in conflict or disaster, to breed new traits into crops — such as pest or heat resistance — and to research the evolution of plants over the ages.
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The Guardian reports that the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, a seed bank near Longyearbyen on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, has flooded due to "melting and heavy rain." The seeds remain safe, according to the article.
coverage:
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Syrian Seed Bank Gets New Home Away From War
Bayer AG Offers to Buy Monsanto
30,000-Year-Old Giant Virus 'Comes Back to Life'
An Isolated Vault Could Store Our Data on DNA for 2 Million Years .
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(Score: 2) by frojack on Thursday October 06 2016, @04:52PM
So how long can a seed be kept with any expectation that it will germinate and grow?
In my endeavors to plant trees, from harvested seeds, I've found that if you don't plant it right away, or the next spring at the latest, your chance of any success is dismal at best. Squirrels have a better track record than I do, mostly due to their forgetfulness.
I've heard of finding ancient Egyptian grain jars, but I've never heard of the outcome of any planting trials.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @05:25PM
http://www.highmowingseeds.com/blog/seed-viability-chart/ [highmowingseeds.com]
(Score: 3, Funny) by bob_super on Thursday October 06 2016, @05:27PM
According to various documentaries, ancient seeds have a 100% chance to grow, if they spawn civilization-ending monstrous aberrations which can only be stopped by an awkward misunderstood scientist with family issues and her courageous handsome ex-boyfriend.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @06:19PM
I sort of remember "Jack and the Bean Stalk", is that the documentary you meant...?
Turns out that it's pretty old, "The Story of Jack Spriggins and the Enchanted Bean", 1734. And related going back ~5000 years, per wikipedia.
(Score: 3, Informative) by bootsy on Thursday October 06 2016, @05:48PM
Check out http://www.kew.org/science-conservation/millennium-seed-bank [kew.org]
If you are in the UK you can visit this. It's about an hour or so drive from London in Wakehurst in a National Trust site leased out to Kew and the Royal Botanical Society. They have information about this subject and do talks several times a year.
The answer to your question turns out to vary a lot. In the right conditions some seeds can last for 1000s of years whereas others are more sensitive. Some can survive salt water and float accross oceans. Temperature, light, humidity and pH all play a part. It certainly showed me how much I don't know about the subject!
(Score: 2) by Username on Thursday October 06 2016, @09:41PM
Keep them in the freezer with the fruit. Though, most trees you buy from a nursery are cloned. Take a green spike off your tree, splice it with a root and stick it in mud. I have a 1/4 success rate with that.
The one that pisses me off the most is grass seed. No point in even saving that stuff.
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 07 2016, @10:49AM
Plant biologist here. I've visited the Wageningen seed bank during my study and seed breeders also store seeds many years for quality control.
In the seed bank they had different levels for storing various crop seeds. Seeds were harvested/dried at room temperature and depending on the species they were moved to 4 degrees C storage and -20 degrees C storage. Storing in these freezers requires the seeds to be packed air tight (freezers have very high humidity and viability can drop quickly). These ways you can store seeds for many years. Multiple batches are made and from time to time batches are checked for germination. If it drops below a certain level, new seeds are produced.
The seed breeder where I worked at stored seeds at a fixed room temperature (18-20 degrees C) and checked seed batches from time to time as well. The reason for room temperature storage is that customers also most likely store it at room temperature (non-favourable conditions). Those seeds also have an expiration date (mostly 1 - 2 years).
(Score: 2, Insightful) by jmorris on Thursday October 06 2016, @05:39PM
The odds any science story will devolve to AGW pimping seems to be close to 1:1, some just take longer. There doesn't even seem to be much of a correlation between the relevance of the story either. This one manages it in the first sentence of the summary.
It does seem driven by the same sort of force. Godwin's Law encodes the tendency of certain people to throw "Hitler" when they lose an argument. The press / Democratic Party (BIRM) seem driven to reduce every possible problem to a need for more power for themselves and to dismiss any opposition through the use of one of a couple of common tropes, "literally Hitler", accusation of some *ism, climate alarmism / enviromentalism, etc. We need a more encompassing Law to cover the whole set.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @05:55PM
Jeebus! And I thought some things triggered me!
(Score: 3, Interesting) by frojack on Thursday October 06 2016, @06:24PM
The odds any science story will devolve to AGW pimping seems to be close to 1:1, some just take longer.
I too thought that reference in the story was gratuitous at best. It was a stretch at best, but when preceded by the word "MIGHT" its just over the top pandering.
Of course Aleppo is pretty much totally destroyed by warring factions, and that area of Syria hasn't produced any significant crops for about three years running, and the population has pretty much fled. Apparently none of the seeds in this seed bank have been salvaged, and perhaps have already found their way into someone's soup.
Never mind all that, this is further proof that Global Warming is going to kill us all, and this whole war is all about oil.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 07 2016, @10:54AM
What I get from the news is that only parts of Aleppo are in war. The government controlled area's seem pretty safe (I've seen pictures of people having pool parties and such).
(Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 07 2016, @12:42AM
Everything to you is a fucking affront! Because of you and your ilk, we're headed for NTE [wordpress.com].
You brutalize and torture us, and then expect to be able to rape us whenever you want [wordpress.com],
Fuck you! In a way, I'll be glad when the end comes [wordpress.com]. It will be your fault -- you and all the others like you, with your dicks swinging and your machinery of death. You're going to kill us all, and no amount of stored seeds is going to stop that.
The only thing that could be done would be to wipe you and your torturing/brutalizing rapist brethren out right away.
So do us all a favor and kill yourself!
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 07 2016, @02:53AM
The odds any science story will devolve to AGW pimping seems to be close to 1:1, some just take longer. There doesn't even seem to be much of a correlation between the relevance of the story either. This one manages it in the first sentence of the summary.
It does seem driven by the same sort of force. Godwin's Law encodes the tendency of certain people to throw "Hitler" when they lose an argument. The press / Democratic Party (BIRM) seem driven to reduce every possible problem to a need for more power for themselves and to dismiss any opposition through the use of one of a couple of common tropes, "literally Hitler", accusation of some *ism, climate alarmism / enviromentalism, etc. We need a more encompassing Law to cover the whole set.
Given that what you're talking about implies ignorance, intentional deception, and a complete absence of critical thinking, perhaps we should call it "Trump's Law" or that one is engaging in "Trumpisms"? "Trumping"? "DonaldSpeak" maybe?
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Friday October 07 2016, @12:58PM
Oh that was coined a political generation ago as "Shrubspeak," as in something George W. Bush would say.
Washington DC delenda est.
(Score: 2) by Username on Thursday October 06 2016, @09:20PM
So, in order to protect their seed bank from devastation, they’re moving it from sodom to gomorrah.
(Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Friday October 07 2016, @03:16AM
Of The Windup Girl [wikipedia.org] by Paolo Bacigalupi.
If you like speculative fiction, especially dystopian stuff, it's definitely worth the read.
No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr