New gene to make plants heat-tolerant in rising temperatures by Staff Writers Houston TX (SPX) Aug 11, 2021
With temperatures rising globally, agricultural crops are feeling the stress. Warmer weather can cause a large reduction in crop yield. The Kendal Hirschi Lab at Baylor College of Medicine recently had a patent approved for a gene to make plants more tolerant to higher temperatures. Drs. Kendal Hirschi and Ninghui Cheng discuss the importance of the patent and its environmental impact. "In commercial agriculture, we want high yield and nutritious foods. In hot temperatures, the yield can be low, which is a problem. With this new gene, we're protecting plants when the temperatures rise so they can grow better," said Cheng, assistant professor of pediatrics-nutrition at Baylor and Texas Children's Hospital. The yield of crops is falling due to increased temperatures, as crops were not bred to withstand this kind of heat. When this plant gene is expressed in crops, it gives them a booster shot that enables them to grow at temperatures that are not permissive for growth of traditional crops. "When it gets hot, plants grows less. For instance, raising the temperature two degrees can cause a 50% reduction in crop yield. Two degrees doesn't sound like much, but the effect is that the crop will be lost," said Hirschi, professor of pediatrics-nutrition at Baylor and Texas Children's. Hirschi said, "With this technology, the two-degree temperature shift will cost no yield penalty. Crop yield will remain at 100 bushels, whereas without the gene, yield would come down to 50 bushels." As the world environment gets warmer, it becomes important to develop crop varieties that are responsive to environmental changes. Traditional breeding approaches have been effective but take decades to produce heat-tolerant crops. With this technology, scientists can develop better crops over the course of a few years, including rice, corn wheat and soybeans.
How the new gene works The Hirschi Lab is part of the Children's Nutrition Research Center, which houses laboratories of varied disciplines, a vast array of state-of-the-art equipment, a greenhouse, observation labs and accommodations for research volunteers, a metabolic kitchen, and an elite group of scientists conducting groundbreaking research. Other collaborators include Dr. Sunghun Park, professor of crop functional genomics at Kansas State University.
Pig farms accused of defiling Mexico's 'sacred wells' Merida, Mexico (AFP) Aug 5, 2021 Long revered by the Maya people as sacred and today a magnet for tourists, local indigenous communities fear the water-filled sinkholes of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula are under threat from industrial pig farms. Known as cenotes, the thousands of cavities are part of a vast labyrinth of caves connected to a giant aquifer under the lush jungle of a region known as the "Riviera Maya." For the indigenous people who inhabit the area in southeast Mexico, they are a source of drinking water that their a ... read more
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