When civil war erupted in Syria, Ahmed Amri immediately thought about seeds.
Specifically, 141,000 packets of them sitting in cold storage 19 miles
south of Aleppo. They included ancient varieties of wheat and durum
dating back nearly to the dawn of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent,
and one of the world’s largest collections of lentil, barley, and faba
bean varieties—crops that feed millions of people worldwide every day.
If these seeds were decimated, humanity could lose precious genetic
resources developed over hundreds, or in some cases thousands, of years.
And suddenly, with the outbreak of violence, their destruction seemed
imminent.
Amri is the director of genetic resources at the International Center
for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA), one of 11
international genebanks charged with conserving the world’s most vital
crops and their wild relatives. Each center has a speciality—you’ll find
the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines, for
example, while the International Potato Center is based in Peru—and this
one focuses on preserving and protecting crops from arid regions,
mostly in developing countries. The Center’s crown jewel is its
genebank, where its samples are identified and stored for future use,
either by the center’s scientific staff or plant breeders around the
world.
READ MORE:http://www.jbbardot.com/syrianscientists-heirloom-destruction/
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