Brazil’s Green Genetic Bank Soon to Be World’s Fourth Largest

A Brazilian germplasm bank Brazil is preparing to rise in the global ranking of leading holders of plant species. The Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa), linked to the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food Supply, is going to expand its germplasm bank up to 150,000 samples by the end of this year.

This means that the country will have 150,000 types of plant seeds, and their genetic material, stored for research and use in agribusiness.

Embrapa researcher Luciano Nass explains that the bank means safety to the country, as agribusiness is important to Brazil. "The ranking is led by powers such as the United States and China. The world's leading (food) producers have that type of reserve," explains Nass, who is in charge of the genetic resources program of the Embrapa Laboratory in the United States (Labex).

The seeds remain in storage to be used in the long term. In other words, should any culture have problems with pests, diseases, it is possible to resort to the bank in order to find, in the stored seeds, some kind of resistance to the disease.

The idea is for the bank to also contain, for instance, material best suited to high temperatures, as global warming should demand changes in agriculture.

The United States currently have the world's largest germplasm bank, with 500,000 samples, followed by China, with 390,000, and Germany, with 160,000. Brazil should reach the mark of 150,000 by the end of this year. Until recently, the country had 107,000 samples and was seventh in the ranking.

The bank will be complemented by material from the United States, by means of an exchange between Embrapa's Labex and the National Center for Genetic Resource Preservation, of the United States' Agricultural Research Service (ARS). The ARS and Embrapa have a cooperation agreement.

The United States will send to Brazil 17,000 samples of rice and 23,000 of soy. The rice samples have already arrived in the country, as did part of the soy samples. They should all be in Brazil until the end of this year, according to Nass.

The seeds are stored in a structure owned by the Embrapa in Brazilian capital Brasí­lia. In addition to them, there are samples being used in different units of the company, which comprise the so-called active banks. In other words, they are being used for research.

The idea, according to Nass, is for the samples in the active banks also to be in the bank in Brasí­lia. For preservation, they are stored at minus 18 degrees Celsius.

The samples from the United States, for example, undergo a quarantine process before entering the germplasm bank. During that period, the seeds are checked for contamination, for instance, and multiplied in order to generate a greater quantity.

Anba – www.anba.com.br

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Federal Police agent's badge

Brazil Has Two Polices: One Shines, the Other Puts the Country to Shame

On Sunday, May 27, nine people remained from the 48 arrested during Operação Navalha ...

Brazil and the Bully

I hope that the new totalitarian mentality in the US does not translate into ...

Petty Theft: No Espionage Behind Disappearance of Brazil’s State Secrets

Brazilian officials said petty theft and not corporate espionage was responsible for the disappearance ...

Brazil Cheers IMF Approval of Brazilian Pilot Plan

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) authorized a Brazilian pilot project that will allow the ...

The Stars of Brazil’s 2008 Auto Show: 100% Nationally Designed Cars

Several multinationals in the auto industry have elected Brazil, for some time now, as ...

2007 Forecast: Brazil Will Grow 3.4% and Export Record US$ 150 Billion

Driven by domestic consumption, the Brazilian economy should grow 3.4% in 2007. The growth ...

Renewable Sources Account for Close to Half of Brazil’s Energy Supply

The share of renewable sources in domestic energy supplies rose to 44.5% in 2005, ...

Brazil: Why Is Everyone Partying?

A party happens on a birthday, or a wedding. I loathe parties. I can’t ...

A Final Push to Nab Nazi War Criminals Hidden in Brazil and South America

The Simon Wiesenthal Center, a prominent Jewish rights group, has launched Operation Last Chance ...

Brazil Has Long Way to Go Before Wiping Out Piracy, Says the US

Brazil and the United States have a long history of strong relations, and we  ...