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Ag Researchers Say Breakthroughs Are Possible, But Only If Funding Comes Through

Scientific research could deliver transformative technologies to the food system over the next decade, according to a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Advances in things like gene editing, data sharing and microbiology could make crops more resilient to climate change and livestock more environmentally sustainable.

But the report, released Wednesday, also warns that the U.S. is falling behind in public funding for agricultural research and the pace of innovation will lag without more investment.

A few of the potential breakthroughs the report details are:

  • Nanosensors or biosensors: These could help farmers be more efficient with water and fertilizer. They could also detect spoiled food or diseases in livestock before they cause an outbreak.
  • The microbiome: Researchers want to understand how microbes interact with plants in the soil and livestock in their guts. Engineered microbes could make crops more efficient or prevent illness in animals.
  • Gene editing: Researchers are already working on methods to add desirable traits to plants like drought resistance.

But the U.S. lacks the infrastructure it needs to fulfill all of the potential of those technologies, according to Susan Wessler, a genetics researcher at the University of California, Riverside and one of the authors of the report.

“We’re missing the facilities,” Wessler told reporters during a webinar, offering an example of phenotyping greenhouses that can speed up the process of plant breeding.

“Many of these are coming online in other countries, particularly China. There haven’t been sufficient initiatives to fund that in this country. The sources to fund shovel-ready projects has not been there,” she said.

That was another concern voiced in the report — the U.S. is losing its edge when it comes to food and agriculture science.

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Developing disease resistance in new wheat varieties

Video: Developing disease resistance in new wheat varieties


Dr. Colin Hiebert, research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada – Morden, is focused on developing new tools that wheat breeders can use to improve, diversify and strengthen disease resistance in new wheat varieties. This includes new genomic tools that address resistance to five diseases including: Fusarium head blight, leaf rust, stripe rust, stem rust and common bunt.

Learn more about how research conducted at AAFC-Morden will impact wheat variety development, production and profitability for the future. This research is part of the Canadian National Wheat Cluster and funding is provided through the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Alberta Grains, Sask Wheat, Manitoba Crop Alliance, Western Grains Research Foundation and Canadian Field Crop Research Alliance.