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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
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GREECE 1969. FAO WHEAT EXPLORATION MISSION IN GREECE
Exact date unknown. Greece, 1969 - West of Karpension. Miss Bennett discusses with Greek women the varieties of wheat they grow and how they perform. In these dry and stony mountain soils, many of the modern cultivars produced in the plains do not perform well.
Lead caption:
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.

01/01/1969
Credit
© FAO/Florita Botts
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
708.05 KB
Unique ID
UF12NJ4
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.