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Soaring Temperatures Threaten Crops, So Scientists Are Looking to Alter the Plants
Soaring Temperatures Threaten Crops, So Scientists Are Looking to Alter the Plants

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • New York Times

Soaring Temperatures Threaten Crops, So Scientists Are Looking to Alter the Plants

The world's bread baskets are heating up, threatening the global food supply. Climate change has already shrunk yields for major crops like wheat and maize, and crop losses are likely to worsen in the coming decades. But researchers are trying to avoid that future by helping plants deal with heat. 'There's a lot of excitement in identifying why it is that some crops that are grown in the most extreme conditions are able to survive,' said Carl Bernacchi, a crop researcher at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the author of one of a trio of papers on crop modification that were published Thursday in the journal Science. Farmers can help crops beat the heat with water-based cooling, but that method has limitations. Modifying crops, either through traditional crossbreeding, artificially sped-up mutation or direct genetic editing, offers control over how plants respond to heat. Photosynthesis, the process through which plants get energy, grinds to a halt between 40 and 45 degrees Celsius, or 104 to 113 degrees Fahrenheit, temperatures that are becoming more common in many of the world's agricultural regions. 'Photosynthesis really dictates the currency plants have to use,' Dr. Bernacchi said. 'If photosynthesis falters, plants run out of energy and die.' Dr. Bernacchi and his co-authors reviewed the potential of editing rubisco, the key enzyme that transforms carbon into sugar, and its partner, rubisco activase. In plants that grow in warm climates, rubisco activase seems to work better at helping rubisco function. Transferring that molecule from hot-climate plants to cool-climate plants can help cool-climate plants adapt to heat. Simply boosting its activity could help, too. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

A tiny speck of land with generations of history etched into every hill
A tiny speck of land with generations of history etched into every hill

The Advertiser

time3 days ago

  • The Advertiser

A tiny speck of land with generations of history etched into every hill

Maria Island has been witness to a huge human history at odds with its size and remote location, off Tasmania's east coast. On this speck in the Tasman Sea, the Tyreddeme people wintered for millennia; convicts were quartered in miserable conditions on wind-smashed hillsides; farmers grazed sheep; and an Italian-born visionary, Diego Bernacchi, sought to fashion a kingdom of sorts, establishing vineyards, cement works, a grand hotel and a coffee palace that still stands today. Just this one picture is rich in stories. Bernacchi's vineyards once marched in straight rows down this hill. At its top, where spindly trees have bent to the will of the wind, Mrs Hunt's Cottage was built in the early 1900s on the ruins of the 1846 magistrate's residence. From here, Ruby Hunt operated a pedal wireless, transmitting telegrams and weather reports to Hobart. In the 1960s, Cape Barren Geese were among threatened species brought to Maria in a bid to secure their survival, the Tassie devil being the latest to join the ark.

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