Safeguarding a global seed heritage from Syria to Svalbard
This paper presents the story of the rescue and reconstitution of the unique seed collection held in the international genebank of International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) in Syria. Being among the first depositors to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, ICARDA managed to safety duplicate more than 80% of its collection before the last staff had to leave the genebank in 2014 because of the war. Based on the safety duplicates, ICARDA since 2015 have rebuilt their collections and resumed distribution of seeds to users internationally from their new premises in Morocco and Lebanon. The paper describes the multifaceted and layered structure of the global system for the conservation and use of crop diversity that enabled this successful outcome. Genebanks do not work alone but in an increasingly strengthened and experienced multilateral system of governance, science, financial support and collaboration. This system underpins efforts to build sustainable and socially equitable agri-food systems.
Theme | Technical Resources |
Subject | Crop diversity |
Publisher | Nature Plants |
Publication year | 2020 |
Regions | Near East; Europe |
Languages | English |
Resource type | Publications |
Resource link | https://www.nature.com/articles/s41477-020-00802-z.epdf |
Keywords | Role of genebanks; Agricultural biodiversity |
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