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Discovery

Feeding the World - Part One

Discovery

BBC

Science, Technology

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 21 March 2016

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As the world’s population grows and the climate challenges our ability to grow crops, how can agriculture provide enough food? Can we get more from our current food crops for less?

Scientists and farmers alike have been increasingly haunted by the environmental effects of high-intensity farming over the last half century. There is now an urgent need to be more mindful of the landscape and our finite ecological resources.

Professor Kathy Willis, science director of Kew Gardens, looks at how we can breed better-adapted and more efficient crops by exploiting the wealth of natural diversity in our so-called crop wild relatives. They are the species from which all our current crops originally evolved. Many researchers now believe that these ancient relatives hold the key to future crop improvement.

She finds out how the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines is breeding new varieties that can cope with droughts and floods at unpredictable times. Storm surges make farmland in coastal areas too salty for most crops to grow. Pathogens and pests evolve so rice varieties are losing resistance to new strains of pathogens or insects.

Kathy Willis meets the scientists who are reassessing our crops ancient ancestors that hold the genetic diversity that is needed to give the resilience we need to cope with the extremes of climate predicted for the coming decades.

(Photo: Workers on a rice plantation. Credit: Nick Wood)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Thank you for downloading from the BBC.

0:03.0

The details of our complete range of podcasts and our terms of use go to BBCworldservice.com

0:09.0

slash podcasts.

0:11.0

So we're surrounded by a variety of crop plants here.

0:18.0

We've got maize plants in the corner that are taller than I am,

0:22.0

and pineapple plants that are small and squat,

0:26.0

rice plants that come up to my knee.

0:29.0

You might think that we're standing in a field

0:31.0

in some exotic part of the world.

0:33.6

Actually we're in a greenhouse on a rooftop at the University of Oxford

0:37.9

surrounded by plants which provide us with some of our most important sources of food.

0:42.6

And we've got very weedy cassava plants

0:45.0

that should be taller than me, but these plants are never,

0:48.8

ever.

0:49.3

So I don't think cassava production in Oxford

0:52.0

is ever going to be a big business.

0:54.0

My colleague Liam Dolan is one of many scientists searching out ways to meet our increasing demand for more plentiful and nutritious food supply.

1:02.0

So plant scientists across the world are trying to understand how we can make these plants grow better.

1:10.0

But in growing better, use less of the natural resources that the Earth has to offer.

1:16.1

And so there's an adage out there which goes, we want more from less.

1:20.8

I'm Professor Kathy Willis, and in this series for discovery here on the BBC

1:25.4

World Service I'm going to be addressing a set of increasingly urgent questions.

...

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