North Africa to develop drought-resistant barley : Algeria, Egypt and Tunisia have joined forces to create varieties of barley suitable for the North African region.
Agricultural researchers in Algeria, Egypt and Tunisia have teamed up to
create drought-resistant and salt-tolerant varieties of barley better suited
to the North African region.
The project, funded by the Canadian International Development Research
Centre and overseen by the New Partnership for Africa's Development North
Africa Biosciences Network, will see thirty scientists from five
organisations spending the next two years developing the barley
varieties.
Barley is traditionally used as animal feed in much of North Africa, but
lack of alternative food sources is leading to human consumption.
Algeria's National Institute of Agricultural Research (INRAA), Egypt's
National Research Centre and Agricultural Genetic Engineering Research
Institute, and Tunisia's Centre of Biotechnology and National Institute of
Agriculture Research will be involved in the project.
The researchers met in Borj Essedria in southern Tunisia last month (10–11
February) to discuss genetic techniques — including genetic modification —
that could be used to increase barley's nutritional quality, as well as make
it drought- and saltwater-tolerant.
Skander Mekersi, deputy director of INRAA, said researchers would share
skills and equipment, adding that INRAA has invested equipment worth
US$20,000 into the project.
Contact information | n/a |
---|---|
News type | Inbrief |
File link |
http://www.scidev.net/en/news/north-africa-to-develop-drought-resistant-barley.html |
Source of information | SciDev.Net |
Subject(s) | AGRICULTURE |
Geographical coverage | Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt |
News date | 19/03/2008 |
Working language(s) | ENGLISH |