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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA 'Genetic Goldmine' in Chile's Desert Could Help Create New Drought-Resistant Crops
The Atacama Desert in Chile is the driest place on Earth outside of the North and South Poles. Yet its teeming with plant life that has evolved to cope with limited water and nutrients, a high-altitude environment thats exposed to high amounts of radiation from sunlight, and extreme temperature changes that shift 50 degrees between night and day. That makes them the perfect specimens to study in order to develop crops that can grow in a world decimated by climate change.
In a massive 10-year study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a group of scientists examined the genomes of dominant plant species and important soil microbes from the Atacama, and identified 265 genes that play a heavy role in adapting these plants to the harsh desert conditions. The authors describe these findings as a genetic goldmine that could help scientists breed more resilient crops able to withstand the drier climates expected to arise during climate change-induced droughts.
The need to engineer new crops has never been more crucial. Droughts around the world are more frequent and more devastating with each passing year. From 20102018, about $116.7 billion in crops and livestock in the developing world was lost due to droughts.
The Atacama desert is like a perfect natural laboratory to study what an arid world would look like, Rodrigo Gutierrez, a Chilean researcher and a coauthor of the new study, told The Daily Beast. This is an ecosystem-level study. We basically characterized all the plant species that live here, and nailed the most important ones and what we can learn from them.
To identify the genes of interest, the researchers chose to study 32 dominant plant species native to Atacama, and compared their genomes to the genomes of 32 other sister species found in more comfortable environments. That comparison highlighted 265 genes that seemed to have mutated as a response to adapting to the desert. Some of those genes are associated with the ability to better survive with less water, the regulation of biochemistry to deal with nutrient-poor soils, and increased tolerance to brutal radiation.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/chiles-atacama-desert-has-a-genetic-goldmine-that-could-help-us-engineer-drought-resistant-plants?ref=home
GPV
(72,377 posts)Hekate
(90,189 posts)pecosbob
(7,502 posts)for diversity. They learned the hard way what drought and disease could do in their fragile ecosystem. Just watched a fascinating new documentary on them the other day...one of the best I've seen and highly recommended!