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Chinese scientists grow ‘climate-proof’ potatoes to combat food security threats

Chinese scientists grow climate proof potatoes to combat food security threats Pakistan News Today

Chinese scientists grow ‘climate-proof’ potatoes to combat food security threats

2024-12-01 20:35:00



Labels marking potato variety Zhongshu 5 lie next to a container of potato tubers, at a research facility under CIP, in the Yanqing district, Beijing, China, May 14, 2024. — Reuters

In a research facility in northwest Beijing, molecular biologist Li Jieping and his team have made significant strides in combating the challenges posed by climate change to food security, Reuters reported.

The team recently harvested a cluster of unusually small potatoes, one as tiny as a quail’s egg, from a potted plant grown under conditions designed to simulate the high temperatures expected by the end of the century. 

These small potatoes, weighing just 136 grams (4.8 oz), were much smaller than the typical potatoes grown in China, where varieties are often twice the size of a baseball.

Researcher Li Yafei places a leaf into a device to measure the photosynthesis rate of the potato plant, at a research facility under CIP, in the Yanqing district, Beijing, China, April 2, 2024. — Reuters

Potatoes are crucial to global food security due to their high yield compared to other staple crops, and China, as the world’s largest producer, plays a central role in ensuring their availability. 

However, the crop is highly vulnerable to heat, and as climate change accelerates, rising temperatures, alongside intensifying droughts and floods, are threatening crop yields.

A worker wearing a protective suit harvests potato tubers at a greenhouse under Yakeshi Senfeng Potato Industry Company in Yakeshi, Inner Mongolia, China, June 16, 2024. — Reuters

Li and his team are leading a groundbreaking, three-year study to examine how higher temperatures will affect the vegetable, with a focus on China’s two most commonly grown potato varieties.

“I worry about what will happen in the future,” Li said. “Farmers will harvest fewer potatoes, and that will impact food security.” The research, published this month in Climate Smart Agriculture, reveals that higher temperatures accelerate tuber growth by 10 days but also drastically reduce potato yields by over 50%.

A lab worker holds test tubes containing potato plantlets, in a tissue culture laboratory at a research facility under the CIP, in the Yanqing district, Beijing, China, April 17, 2024. — Reuters

Li’s team grew the crop in a controlled chamber set 3 degrees Celsius above the current average temperature in northern Hebei and Inner Mongolia, regions where potatoes are traditionally grown in China.

In the context of global warming, which could reach 3.1°C above pre-industrial levels by 2100, the implications for agriculture are dire. In Inner Mongolia, heavy rains have already caused significant damage to potato crops, introducing diseases that delay harvests.

Meanwhile, seed potato companies like Yakeshi Senfeng are turning to innovative solutions, including aeroponic systems, to ensure higher yields and mitigate disease risks, particularly from late blight, which thrives in warmer, humid conditions.

A worker places potato plantlets, propagated in a laboratory, on the potting mix to transplant them in a greenhouse, at a research facility under CIP, in the Yanqing district, Beijing, China, May 20, 2024. — Reuters

The collaborative research between the International Potato Center (CIP) and the Chinese government is part of an urgent effort to help farmers adapt to the changing climate. 

Li’s team is also developing heat-resistant potato varieties by experimenting with genetic modifications in greenhouses. Li stresses that within the next decade, Chinese farmers will need to adapt to these changes by adjusting planting schedules or moving crops to higher altitudes to escape the heat. Failure to do so could result in reduced yields, higher potato prices, and increased food insecurity.

“We need to act now,” Li said. “If we don’t find solutions, farmers will make less money, and consumers will feel the effects through rising prices.”



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