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In September
2002, the international press reported that looters had destroyed
Afghanistan's largest crop seed collection. The seed was dumped
so that looters could take the plastic containers in which it was
stored. "Ironically, the looters took only the plastic containers
and left the seed behind," says Dr. Nasrat Wassimi, Kabul coordinator
of the Future Harvest Consortium to Rebuild Agriculture in Afghanistan,
which is coordinating with seed genebanks in five countries to restore
the lost collections.
The looters
destroyed hundreds of samples of Afghanistan's rich agricultural
heritage. These included samples of wheat, barley, chickpea, lentil,
melons, pistachio, almond, pomegranate, other fruits, and pasture
crops. Many of the seed samples were of traditional farmers' varieties,
bred over generations to prosper under particular local conditions,
and tailored to the tastes of Afghan consumers.
Agricultural
genetic resources are the biological basis of global food security.
The indigenous varieties of any country evolve with genetic adaptations
specific to their environment. These genetic resources form the
raw material from which new crop species are derived, and they form
a pool from which all species draw traits that allow them to adapt
to stresses, such as diseases and pests. The ICARDA mandate region
lies in the heart of the birthplace of agriculture. Afghanistan
is the center of diversity for several species of global significance:
carrot, radish, cherry, plum, apricot, peach, pear, apple, walnut,
pistachio, fig, grape, pomegranate, melon and almond.
ICARDA and Future
Harvest partners have long experience in utilizing cutting edge
genetic technologies to assess, preserve and protect the genetic
resources of targeted countries. Unique and diverse genetic resources
are key to developing new market niches. In post conflict situations,
ICARDA can provide storage and restore functional, cost-effective,
cold storage facilities for holding national collection and repatriate
duplicate accessions being held at international facilities. Using
a community-based participatory approach, in situ conservation efforts
can be implemented for on-farm conservation of agrobiodiversity.
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The Future Harvest
Consortium recovers seed from duplicate collections around the world
for repatriation when collections are lost or damaged. The table
below lists Afghanistan germplasm located with Consortium members
of the CGIAR.
In early August 2003, a three-week collection effort will collect
unique and endangered Afghanistan crop germplasm. Scientists from
the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
(ICARDA), and specially trained Afghans will re-collect crop seed
in northern Afghanistan. Upon their return to ICARDA headquarters
in Syria, the collected material will be planted to increase the
seed and then placed in the Center's genebank. Once there, it will
remain safe and secure while being made available to the international
scientific community for research and development. Most importantly,
this material will be available to broaden the genetic base for
wheat and food legume breeding efforts in Afghanistan.
For more information:
ICARDA@CGIAR.ORG
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