| Imperial
College London Press Release
Under embargo for
10.00 BST
29 August 2002
Lack of funding for world
crop diversity
threatens sustainable food supply
Researchers from the Department of Agricultural Sciences
at Imperial College have warned that a large proportion
of the world’s collection of crop diversity could
be lost due to a lack of funding for the “genebanks”
in which they are stored.
In a report launched today at the United Nations World
Summit on Sustainable Development, Professor Jeff Waage,
head of the department, warns that many genebanks are
now unable to fulfil basic conservation functions, putting
at risk the crop diversity that underpins stable and
sustainable food supply.
The report, Crop
Diversity at Risk: The Case for Sustaining Crop Collections,
provides the latest picture of genebank performance.
It compares data from 99 countries collected by the
UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in 2000 to
similar data from 151 governments collected by the FAO
in 1996.
It has found that although the number of plant samples
held in crop diversity collections has increased in
66 per cent of countries, genebank budgets have been
cut back in 25 per cent of countries and remained static
in another 35 per cent.
Samples held in genebanks must be periodically planted
and new seed harvested in order to keep stock viable,
and a backlog in this regeneration process is a strong
indication of critical under-resourcing. Researchers
found that over a half of developing countries and 27
per cent of developed countries have reported an increase
in the number of plant samples in urgent need of regeneration.
Professor Waage says,
“Most people assume the crop diversity scientists
have already collected from cultivated fields is safe.
We found that this is not necessarily the case. In fact,
many critical genebank collections are in a precarious
state. If these collections are allowed to fail, then
we will lose the valuable crop diversity they contain
forever.”
In order to safeguard future crop diversity, the report
calls for the establishment of a permanent international
endowment, funded by public and private sources, to
support the maintenance of the world’s most critical
collections. Professor Waage explains: “The data
points us to one major conclusion: genebanks can no
longer rely on uncertain annual sources of funding –
as most do now – to fulfil their perpetual responsibility
for maintaining the diversity of plants that are essential
for food security.”
Genebanks hold a significant portion of the world’s
agricultural heritage and provide the last sanctuary
for a growing number of crop wild relatives. These include
the tomato and cassava (a starchy root crop that is
a staple food in parts of Africa and South America),
whose wild relatives are approaching extinction due
to deforestation and development. Wild species of coffee,
grape and wheat also join the list of crop relatives
facing genetic erosion – the process that can
lead to extinction.
On-farm losses are also great as farmers give up traditional
crop varieties in favour of high-yielding modern types.
The UN FAO estimates that about three-quarters of the
original varieties of agricultural crops have been lost
from farm fields since 1900. Such losses include wheat
varieties in China, maize in Mexico and apples in the
United States.
The wheat species Triticum monococcum gives
an example of the vital role genebanks can play. Although
widely grown for bread throughout the ancient Roman
Empire, it is now almost lost, with relic populations
existing only in Turkey and possibly Yemen. However,
because of its high fibre content, T. monococcum is
again in demand and a project has been established to
bring back this crop using samples stored in genebanks.
“Both on-farm diversity and wild crop relatives
are sources of rare genetic traits needed for coping
with environmental stress, plant disease and pests,”
comments Professor Waage. “Knowing this, countries
have undertaken important efforts to expand their crop
diversity collections. A main task now is to ensure
the safety of those collections and their accessibility
to farmers, plant breeders and researchers.”
For further details contact:
Abigail Smith
Imperial College Press Office
Tel: +44 (0)20 7594 6701
Email: abigail.smith@ic.ac.uk
Notes to editors
Website: www.ic.ac.uk
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