Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Alternative Versions
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO Wheat Exploration Mission
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
Greece. Harvested wheat stack
GREECE 1964. Forest survey
GREECE 1964. Forest survey
AFGHANISTAN 1969. Karakul lamb
Greece, 2015. Migrants
Greece, 2015. Migrants
GREECE 1964. Forest survey
Greece, 2016. Life jackets used by migrant refugees
GREECE 1948. Joint FAO - UNICEF project
AFGHANISTAN 1969. Training and demonstration in animal health and animal husbandry
THAILAND 1969. FAO assignment, Thailand
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
GREECE 1969. FAO Wheat Exploration Mission
July 1969. Greece. Miss Bennett making notes in her field book. All details of wheat samples taken are noted in field books with numbered pages. Collected samples are placed in cotton bags and numbered by detaching numbered strips from field book pages.
07/01/1969
Credit
©FAO/Florita Botts
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
8.42 MB
Unique ID
UF213TM
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
In July 1969, Erna Bennett, Genetic Conservation and Information
Specialist from the Crop Ecology and Genetic Resources Branch of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), carried out a mission in Greece searching for and collecting primitive wheat varieties native to the mountains and valleys of that country. These primitive wheat races are
one of the world's richest storehouses of the genetic characteristics that
plant breeders require. They will build desirable characteristics from crops as old as agricultural man, like building blocks, into new high-yielding varieties. But old races are being swamped by the spread of modern varieties, and in certain areas - and in the case of certain crops - emergency measures
are necessary to collect these old races before they disappear completely.
FAO and other leading international crop improvement organizations are
increasingly concerned with the conservation of primitive crop races, in whose amazing diversity hides the promise of better crops to come.