Gene remedy
Dutch scientists have discovered a gene that makes plants resistant to nematodes, and are using it to develop transgenic worm-resistant crops. Every year the world loses about US $100 billion worth of crops to tiny pests that live in the soil and eat the roots of plants. Researchers at the Dutch Centre for Plant Breeding and Reproduction Research in Wageningen found a wild beet variety that resists the nematodes that eat domestic sugar beet. By identifying the wild beet chromosome that carried the nematode resistance, they were able to introduce different
Related Content
- Metagenomic and functional analyses of the consequences of reduction of bacterial diversity on soil functions and bioremediation in diesel-contaminated microcosms
- Isolation and characterization of three and four ring PAHs degrading bacteria from contaminated sites, Ankleshwar, Gujarat, India
- Bangladesh State of the Environment Report : The Monthly Overview, September 2013
- Metagenomic analysis of the bioremediation of diesel-contaminated Canadian high Arctic soils
- GFP expressing bacterial biosensor to measure lead contamination in aquatic environment
- Thalassemia patients might need fewer blood transfusions