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Barley

Why barley? Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is the fourth most important cereal crop in the world after wheat, maize and rice. It has a global production of more than 150 million tonnes produced from…

Banana/Plantain

Why banana/plantain? About 150 million tonnes of bananas (Musa spp.) are harvested annually throughout the tropics, but only 15% or so (mainly dessert types) is traded internationally. Most…

A Decade of Wild Diversity

Existence threatened But many have not been collected and their existence in the wild is threatened by deforestation, expansion of agriculture, climate change and other challenges. If they disappear…

Hand holding barley varieties

Project Components

The project included four main components: the prioritization of crop wild relatives based on a gap analysis, the collection of CWR in the field, CWR conservation in genebanks, and the use of CWR…

Terms & Conditions

Please read these terms and conditions carefully before using this website. These are the terms and conditions (“the Terms”) of the Global Crop Diversity Trust (“the Crop Trust”) (“we” or…

Accessibility Statement

We believe in making the web site's information and functionality equally available to all visitors. We have therefore made this site as usable and accessible as possible so you can easily…

Cookies & Privacy Policy

1. Application This privacy policy relates to: How we handle information received or collected about you as an individual through the Website, How we communicate with you as an…

Crops

The project focused on the collecting and conservation of the wild relatives of 28 priority crops. Nineteen of these were also subject to pre-breeding activities.

A-Global-Rescue-Safeguarding-the-Worlds-Crop-Wild-Relatives.pdf

A S A F E G U A R D I N G T H E W O R L D ’ S C R O P W I L D R E L AT I V E S Introducing the Wild 4 Collecting at a Glance 6 A Global Collecting Effort 9 No Walk in the Park What it Took…

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