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June 29, 2009
Source:
Society for Experimental
Biology
Global food security in a
changing climate depends on the nutritional value and yield of
staple food crops. Researchers at
Monash University in
Victoria, Australia have found an increase in toxic compounds, a
decrease in protein content and a decreased yield in plants
grown under high CO2 and drought conditions.
The research, to be presented
by Dr Ros Gleadow on 29 June 2009 at the
Society for Experimental
Biology Annual Meeting in Glasgow, has shown that the
concentration of cyanogenic glycosides, which break down to
release toxic hydrogen cyanide, increased in plants in elevated
CO2. This was compounded by the fact that protein
content decreased, making the plants overall more toxic as the
ability of herbivores to break down cyanide depends largely on
the ingestion of sufficient quantities of protein.
Data have also shown that
cassava, a staple food crop in tropical and subtropical regions
due to its tolerance of arid conditions, may experience yield
reductions in high CO2. Combined with an increase in
cyanogenic glycosides, this has major implications for the types
of crops that can be grown in the future if CO2
levels continue to rise: "We need to be preparing for the
predicted reduction in nutritional value of many plants in the
coming century by developing and growing different cultivars
which, for cassava in particular, may not be easy' says Dr
Gleadow. |
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