‘Seed Hunter’ reaps success

又是一篇讲种质资源科学家的新闻文章,一个来自ICARDA的搞大麦资源的科学家叫Dr Ken Street的故事。呵呵,来自http://www.queenslandcountrylife.com/,原文链接地址http://sl.farmonline.com.au/news/nationalrural/grains-and-cropping/general/seed-hunter-reaps-success/1628938.aspx?storypage=0

NND,里面又提到了中国,说从中国和巴西搞资源实在是太难了,哈哈哈哈

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‘Seed Hunter’ reaps success

GRAHAM FULLER
THE ‘Seed Hunter’ of recent television fame gave an international audience at last week’s 14th Barley Technical Symposium an insight into his work which continues to attract worldwide interest.Dr Ken Street, who works for the International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), based in Aleppo, Syria, was in top form, promising delegates that he was not going to “blow your heads away with high-browed science” when talking about his work.

It’s topical because it neatly dovetails with the on-going climate change debate, requiring existing commercial crops be scrutinised to see whether more resistance can be bred into them by accessing ancient crop varieties which still exist in some of the remotest parts of the world.

The idea is to seek out as many variations as possible in the hope that key traits like a plant’s ability to thrive in harsh temperatures using less water, for instance, can be bred from the genes stored in seed banks around the world.

The Seed Hunter’s work is taking place against a backdrop of exploding global populations, widespread loss of arable farmland, requiring researchers like Dr Street to look further afield in his bid to seek out “novel genes” able to deliver genetic improvements.

Much of his efforts are being directed towards encouraging the plant-breeding community to make greater utilisation of gene banks which mostly will release their material free of charge, although it is more difficult to obtain germplasm from countries like China and Brazil, for example.

Nevertheless, Dr Street remains undaunted, conceding there is duplication – probably in the order of 35 percent when it come to barley – within seed banks around the world.

“Getting what you want out of a gene bank is a little bit like looking for the proverbial needle…so the question becomes, how can we rationalise the search, or the trait we are looking for?” he said.

The point being made here is that it really has been “a matter of luck” when a plant breeder makes a specific request of a gene bank.

“What is needed is a repeatable and rational method to improve that flow of useful genes into the wider community,” Dr Street said.

Increasingly, he is focusing his attention on an approach known as FIGS (Focused Identification of Germplasm Strategy).

It’s all about assessing the environmental influences acting on plant populations, tracking their genetic variations in the quest for sought-after traits which might range from seed quality to dormancy issues, to name but a few.

Today, increasing emphasis is being placed on geo-referencing each collection site so all the related agri-climatic factors can be minutely detailed – to see how temperature, for instance, may have influenced the well-being of plants in some far away paddock.

Journeying to countries like Tajikistan, Dr Street said he came across a rare wheat strain being curated by a family in an extremely remote district.

“They were very poor and probably will never see the benefit of those genes but they were happy to give them across – and gave us a nice meal as well,” he said.

And the discovery of a boron-tolerant wheat gene in South Australia is another example of the value of seed banks, according to Dr Street.

Meanwhile, FIGS also has been deployed across north Africa and central Asia, scoring a successful outcome in finding a strain of wheat that is resistant to Sunn Pest, described as “a nasty little bug” that kills juvenile cereal plants, also destroying grain quality.

Dr Street urged plant breeders globally to forge closer links with ICARDA.

“We will work with you to help you craft a set of materials that you won’t have to screen more than you should,” he said.

Buoyed by the current progress of FIGS, Dr Street accepts there is still room to improve its methodology.

“But the more we use it, the better we will we get,” he said.

Preserving the Past to Protect Our Future

刚在博客右下角的google RSS看到的一篇科普新闻文章,ARS信息部门的头头写的他们的一个科学家在厄瓜多尔做的资源保护工作。个人觉得其标题取得不错,“保存过去以保护未来”,就像原来《走进科学》当年给我们做一期节目《寻找失落的基因-中国国家种质库》(详见./oldblog/article.asp?id=138)一个意思,呵呵。有时英文比中文更好表达意思,像这个标题,我就想了很久,也没能想出一个完美的中文村题。

该文还是给了我们一些有益的启示的。作物种质资源保护工作是一项比较难以开展的工作,多数古老的农家品种一般都栽培在经济发展相对比较落后、交通闭塞的地区,随着经济的发展,这些地区农业人口纷纷外出务工,农业人口减少,地越种越少,再加上这些老品种在栽培经济性方面普遍不如商业品种,其生存形势是岌岌可危。虽然我们国家在过去的几十年里进行过大规模的资源考察和征集工作,但收集到的资源数量应该还是远远少于实际存在资源数的,这一点能明显从我国农作物资源分布图中看出来,比如说云南地区的资源分布就明显与实际情况不符,后藏地区资源如此众多是因为开展过一次大规模的西藏地区农作物考察收集工作,效果极其明显。所以,如何结合当地经济发展的议题开展资源保护与抢救性收集工作应是当前资源工作的重要内容。很明显的一点,有价值的东西才能存在,资源只有得到利用才会得到更好的保护与发展。像文中提到的充分利用安第斯山区特色作物资源进行特色农产品深加工开发、手工艺品开发和特色农家旅游等就是十分好的借鉴。这样既保护了当地作物多样性,又为当地百姓谋得一条特色经济发展之路。

crop
中国主要农作物种质资源地理分布(the Atlas of Chinese main crops germplasm resources)

中国主要农作物种质资源地理分布图(来源于http://www.cgris.net

文章里的中文是我的注。

以下资料来源于http://www.swnewsherald.com,原文链接为http://www.swnewsherald.com/online_contentcrf/2009/09/essept09_3crops.php,

作者为SANDY MILLER HAYS, Agricultural Research Service

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Preserving the Past to Protect Our Future

By SANDY MILLER HAYS, Agricultural Research Service
Agricultural research isn’t all “sows, cows and plows,” with a few microscopes and DNA sequencers thrown in. Just ask Karen Williams.
She’s a botanist in the Plant Exchange Office of the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) National Germplasm Resources Laboratory in Beltsville, Md., right outside of Washington, D.C. But when Dr. Williams wants to get out town, she’s not thinking about Philadelphia or New York. Her “getaway” is the town of Cotacachi, Ecuador, in the heart of what some consider one of the cradles of world agriculture.
That’s where Dr. Williams works with an international team of scientists to help conserve traditional crops and, at the same time, contribute to the livelihoods of the local people.//说是说替人保护资源,造福当地人,然后呢。。。看下面

In the communities around Cotacachi, tucked away in the northern Andean highlands of Ecuador, people have farmed for thousands of years. The crops they grow are both familiar and not familiar — yes, there’s corn, but there are 30 varieties of it. Beans? The Quichua-speaking farmers and backyard gardeners have 40 varieties.  //丰富的资源啊,看上的是这些东西
These native crops can be an untapped treasure trove for scientists seeking solutions to modern American agriculture’s problems. Often, an ancient version of a crop contains genes that can help a modern version of that same crop in the United States overcome a pest or disease. It’s just a matter of tapping into those long-ago genetics and incorporating the needed genes into a plant breeding program that melds old with new. //利用这些古老资源所蕴含的丰富基因解决美国现代农业生产中的重要问题,这才是真正目的
But in Cotacachi, these ancient crops are more than just a genetic resource; they’re a way of life and the basis of food security. Yet, as has happened in many rural areas, including in the United States, life is changing in Cotacachi. Many families now rely on income from off the family farm, and the men often work away from those farms.
This is where Dr. Williams comes in. She’s been going to Ecuador since 1995, when she first went there to help reestablish Ecuador’s national peanut germplasm collection, fill gaps in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) peanut germplasm collection, and strengthen U.S.-Ecuadorian collaborations in genetic resources.
But her mission has expanded beyond that in the ensuing years. In partnership with an indigenous community organization called the Union of Indigenous and Peasant Communities (UNORCAC); Bioversity International, and the Ecuadorian National Agricultural Research Institute (INIAP) — the equivalent of ARS in Ecuador — she’s helped set up and now advises a program designed to promote conservation and increase use of local crops in the area. This program is funded in large part by USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service.
What’s been accomplished? Scientists have preserved samples of the area’s genetic treasure trove in the National Germplasm Bank at the INIAP Santa Catalina Experiment Station near Quito. Farmers worked with the scientists to evaluate the local varieties of crops in a community garden in Cotacachi, and a catalogue was produced to document the vastness of the diversity. Seed fairs give farmers the chance to display and exchange crop varieties.
A food processing plant has been built to develop and package salsas, marmalades and other products made from the local crops. There’s a community-run ethnobotanical garden that provides local midwives with medicinal plants, helps educate local schoolchildren about their cultural heritage, and generates income from visitors coming to see the diversity of local Andean plants.  //为当地农业经济作贡献
The project has financed construction of rustic rural lodges owned by local families who offer lodging to those visitors. Visitors can learn about traditional crops and farm practices as the families prepare meals made with the yields of their dooryard gardens. The much-needed income that comes from the visitors helps encourage continuing conservation of the traditional crops. //类似于“农家乐”的经营项目
Local women have formed cooperatives that use the crops to make a variety of items offered for sale to tourists: handcrafted necklaces made from native variegated lima beans called “tortas,” for example, and traditional sandals and decorative weavings from the fiber of the cabuyo plant, a relative of agave.
All this activity helps ensure the continuation of those ancient crops, so important to the people of Cotacachi, and to the continued success of the crops that we count on to feed ourselves in this country. And it’s definitely not “just another day in the lab” for Dr. Karen Williams!

MJ & MC

今天上班也没什么事情,明天就国庆,好多单位其实都已经放假了,街上、单位里人也明显变少了,呵呵,it’s a sign, holiday’s coming.
呆着没事,找点歌听听吧,上到verycd,首先就看前推荐栏里的MC Mariah Carey的新专辑

Mariah Carey
Mariah Carey

下了听过之后,觉得,MC老矣,除了一张凶狠无比的album cover,相比起原来那些经典的老歌,里边的歌实在是乏善可陈,基本上找不出什么能听的,一首obsessed翻来覆去的remix了5遍,我还从没见过这样的专辑。算了,我还是找MJ Michael Jackson去吧,还是他经典一些,找了我比较喜欢的History,感觉像是回到了初三啊,呵呵。

Michael Jackson History
Michael Jackson History

向MJ 致敬!

90分钟13公里

现在北京的交通真不知道怎么回事了,晚上都7点了,逛堵,走北三环,13公里的路程居然花了我90分钟,靠!我骑自行车都可以往返两趟了,走路都快到了。
It really sucks, the traffic in Beijing, the National day eve.

用刻录机光头做激光枪DIY试验-失败版

  前段时间在网上看过一老外拿DVD刻录机光头做激光枪的视频,做出来的激光枪威力巨大,能把气球点爆了,把火柴点着了,据说“DVD16X刻录光头的光输出功率大(最高可达250mW),8X功率就小得多,一般只有140mW”呵呵,看了之后很心动,办公室扔着好些烂光驱,虽不是刻录机,但是可以拿来先试试。今天偶然发现自己桌子底下还扔着自己当年的爱国者Combo光驱,于是就动起了手。

先看一下人家的视频吧

咋样?酷吧,哈哈,下边就是我的试验过程了

爱国者Combo光驱

完整的光驱图系事后补拍,就一空壳子

R0012175

能看到光驱是2003年的,呵呵,有历史了

R0012157

第一步就是拆光驱,目的就是把图中间光头部分给拆下来,卸掉导轨就OK了。

R0012158

R0012161

还几个光头部分的特写

R0012162 R0012163

这个控制光头移动的步进电机挺好玩的

R0012164

光头部分终于卸下来了,可是下一点咋办呢?我原来拆过不少光驱,每次最多也就到这步了。

R0012166 R0012169

上面这个浅黄色的塑料部分不好拆,只好硬来了,终于弄开了,发现下边还有好几组镜片呢,噢,原来是这个结构,我还一直以为就那上边一片透镜呢,呵呵。后来一想,也是,激光除了发射还得接收嘛。那激光头在哪儿呢?找了好一会,都没找见,顺着镜片找吧,果然,在一个正方形棱镜旁边找到了。。。又使用暴力拆解。。。。终于。。。

R0012170

看见蓝色透镜左边的正方形棱镜了吧?光头就藏在它上边,这是拆解出来的几组镜片和光头。

R0012171 R0012172

这就是传说中的激光光头了,呵呵,就这么一小点大,我用烙铁给它焊上了电源线,线也是从光驱上拆下来的,呵呵,得有小20年没使过电烙铁了,呵呵,还好,马马虎虎给焊上了。

R0012173

工作桌面

再来几组微距摆拍,俺的Ricoh引以为傲的功能噢,用的Ricoh微距摆拍和清洁套装,这是俺头回用,一纸盒子,即当收纳又当布景,一蓝一灰背景布,一小三脚架,一银一金反光板,一镜头笔,一擦巾

R0012186

R0012181 R0012183

R0012184 R0012185

把光驱读盘指示LED也给拆下来了,呵呵。

Result & Discussion

光头是给拆下来了,下边咋试验法呢,先找电源,没电池,于是就拿了阿福的USB接口充电器,正好抽屉里有根剪了头的USB线,接上,取红、黑两线,正负极。先拿LED试了试,OK,亮了,没问题,再接上光头,咦?!!半天都没反应,没有传说中的激光射出啊,一摸,我靠,就差把我皮都给烫没了,极烫,发热怎么这么大啊,再一看光头,好像烧坏了,有图,可以比较一下。左边是试验前,右边是试验后,明显能看出前边有变化。

R0012171R0012181

试验失败了!

总结并讨论一下,没拆过光驱没见过光头的话,找光头还真不容易,不用暴力也取不到光头;至于为什么失败,最终原因我也不清楚,只能是猜,第一、拆解时光头损坏了;第二、焊电线时光头烧坏了;第三,电源不合适烧坏了光头。我检查了一下电源,6V800mA的输出,应该不至于烧的吧,下次再拆还是拿电池试。

下次有闲功夫时再试吧。