Global Seed Vault Opens in Norway
From the Archives
Posted on February 29, 2008
Previously filed under: Agriculture
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| Photo Credit: Mecy Corps |
A global seed vault, preserving crop varieties from over 100 countries, opened this week (26 February) in Svalbard, Norway.
The Svalbard Global Seed Vault was established to preserve seed samples of the world's crops, guarding against the loss of the planet's biodiversity.
The vault is financed by the Norwegian government with the support of the Global Crop Diversity Trust and the Nordic Gene Bank, and has the capacity to preserve 4.5 million different samples — up to two billion seeds — for thousands of years.
Contributions were received from gene banks around the world, including beans from Colombia, forage crops for livestock from Kenya, cowpea, soybean and groundnut, from Nigeria, and rice from the Philippines.
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The vault is financed by the Norwegian government with the support of the Global Crop Diversity Trust and the Nordic Gene Bank, and has the capacity to preserve 4.5 million different samples — up to two billion seeds — for thousands of years.
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"We'll continue sending backups of regenerated collections to Svalbard each year until the entire CIMMYT cereal collection is represented in the vault holdings," Ortiz told SciDev.Net.
The seeds will be stored at a temperature of minus 18 degrees Celsius. Organisations like CIMMYT will have access to the samples for their own research.
CIMMYT is the only Mexican research centre contributing to the Global Seed Vault. But, according to Mexico's National Institute of Forest, Agricultural and Cattle Research (INIFAP), there are more unrepresented varieties stored in 50-60 seed banks in other institutions like the Autonomous University of Chapingo, the National Autonomous University of Mexico and INIFAP.
Antonio Turrent, a researcher at INIFAP, says the Global Seed Vault is an interesting initiative, "but the best way to protect the Mexican food biodiversity is to construct and support germplasm banks here, in Mexico." He says, the Mexican government has yet to implement such an initiative.
Contributed by Arturo Barba, contributor to SciDev.net. Reprinted with permission from SciDev.net.
To learn more about the global agriculture, see World Rice Research Centers Unite for Africa.
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