




Announcements
Vacancies
- Technical Sales Representative, Leamington, Ontario
- Technical Sales Representative, Ancaster, Ontario
- HR Generalist
- Head Grower Strawberries (West Virginia USA)
- Global Sourcing Manager
- Buying Operations Manager (BOM Process)
- Sourcing Manager EU
- Manager Operations Ethiopia
- Senior Grower
- Propagation Specialist
"Tweeting Growers"
Top 5 - yesterday
- Greenhouse pepper growers in Tokat, Turkey cannot solve root collar rot problem
- Bhutan’s declining chili production sparks concerns
- Red chilis drying between railway lines create a pretty picture
- South Korea: New 9-unit strawberry farm produces 500kg daily
- "Sustainability is also about extending the life of greenhouses"
Top 5 - last week
Top 5 - last month
- "Vertical solar panels under the gutter can provide significant savings in plastic greenhouses"
- The differences between greenhouse growers in US and Canada
- German grower reduces moisture in slabs with Spacer
- Half the labor if tomato grows upside down?
- China: Abundance of crops grow in arid Xinjiang desert
Researchers work to fine-tune hop cultivar cloning and preservation
A genetic library for beer
The University of Guelph may soon house a vast new library. Not one of literature though, but one focused on hops – a mainstay of beer making.
Spurred by the explosion of Canada’s craft beer industry, the University’s Department of Plant Agriculture has started a project to compile, save, and efficiently propagate important Canadian hop varieties.
By Matt McIntosh for AgInnovation Ontario
According to Dr. Praveen Saxena, plant science professor and one of several researchers involved in the initiative, the purpose of the project is two-fold.
“There are many very unique and sometimes very rare hops that people have developed over a very long time, and they must be saved in order for people to access them,” says Saxena.
“Most of what is needed now is imported from the United States and elsewhere, so keeping a library [at the University of Guelph] would also help reduce that. We want to produce uniform plants in large numbers when they are wanted,” he added.
From left to right, Max Jones, Praveen Saxena, Elena Popov, Mukund Shukla and Sherif Sherif, Gosling Institute, University of Guelph
Saxena and his colleagues Mukund Shukla, Elena Popova, and Max Jones are actually involved in several similar genetic library initiatives; the hop project, in fact, is derived from an older one focused on apple rootstocks.
Whether apples or hops, however, Saxena says the idea is the same – to create a genetic library capable of propagating high-quality crops on demand.
The library starts through collection in the lab when people bring in cultivars that they want saved and propagated. Saxena and his colleagues then produce clones of those cultivars by removing specific parts of the plant and cultivating them in a completely sterile and meticulously controlled growing environment.
These clones, says Saxena, can then be preserved in liquid nitrogen “safely and pretty much forever,” and removed from freezing for use at any time.
Photo source: Gosling Institute
Because the clones of these plants are produced in a completely closed lab environment, Saxena says it is possible to preserve traits exactly as originally desired.
Having fewer uncontrolled factors, that is, should mean plants propagated from such clones would be of a more consistent genetic quality than those produced in a field setting – something which is very important for brewers looking to recreate a specific taste.
“We are still in the early stages of this project, but we have had success with other crops. We know we can use this process for all kinds of plants,” says Saxena. “Right now, it is simply a matter of fine tuning the process for hops.”
Once the process is fine-tuned, however, Canadian brewers and beer-enthusiasts may have access to a central, reliably consistent library of truly Canadian ingredients.
The project has received support from the University of Guelph – Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Gryphon’s LAAIR (Leading to Accelerated Adoption of Innovative Research) program, as well as the Gosling Research Institute for Plant Preservation, another division of the University focused on preserving threatened, endangered, and economically important plants.
Gryphon’s LAAIR is funded by Growing Forward 2, a federal-provincial-territorial initiative.
Source: Ag Innovation Ontario
Spurred by the explosion of Canada’s craft beer industry, the University’s Department of Plant Agriculture has started a project to compile, save, and efficiently propagate important Canadian hop varieties.
By Matt McIntosh for AgInnovation Ontario
According to Dr. Praveen Saxena, plant science professor and one of several researchers involved in the initiative, the purpose of the project is two-fold.
“There are many very unique and sometimes very rare hops that people have developed over a very long time, and they must be saved in order for people to access them,” says Saxena.
“Most of what is needed now is imported from the United States and elsewhere, so keeping a library [at the University of Guelph] would also help reduce that. We want to produce uniform plants in large numbers when they are wanted,” he added.
From left to right, Max Jones, Praveen Saxena, Elena Popov, Mukund Shukla and Sherif Sherif, Gosling Institute, University of Guelph
Saxena and his colleagues Mukund Shukla, Elena Popova, and Max Jones are actually involved in several similar genetic library initiatives; the hop project, in fact, is derived from an older one focused on apple rootstocks.
Whether apples or hops, however, Saxena says the idea is the same – to create a genetic library capable of propagating high-quality crops on demand.
The library starts through collection in the lab when people bring in cultivars that they want saved and propagated. Saxena and his colleagues then produce clones of those cultivars by removing specific parts of the plant and cultivating them in a completely sterile and meticulously controlled growing environment.
These clones, says Saxena, can then be preserved in liquid nitrogen “safely and pretty much forever,” and removed from freezing for use at any time.
Photo source: Gosling Institute
Because the clones of these plants are produced in a completely closed lab environment, Saxena says it is possible to preserve traits exactly as originally desired.
Having fewer uncontrolled factors, that is, should mean plants propagated from such clones would be of a more consistent genetic quality than those produced in a field setting – something which is very important for brewers looking to recreate a specific taste.
“We are still in the early stages of this project, but we have had success with other crops. We know we can use this process for all kinds of plants,” says Saxena. “Right now, it is simply a matter of fine tuning the process for hops.”
Once the process is fine-tuned, however, Canadian brewers and beer-enthusiasts may have access to a central, reliably consistent library of truly Canadian ingredients.
The project has received support from the University of Guelph – Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Gryphon’s LAAIR (Leading to Accelerated Adoption of Innovative Research) program, as well as the Gosling Research Institute for Plant Preservation, another division of the University focused on preserving threatened, endangered, and economically important plants.
Gryphon’s LAAIR is funded by Growing Forward 2, a federal-provincial-territorial initiative.
Source: Ag Innovation Ontario
Publication date:
Receive the daily newsletter in your email for free | Click here
Other news in this sector:
- 2023-06-02 Resistant varieties defeat New Delhi virus in Almeria's zucchini campaign
- 2023-06-01 Salatrio: Rijk Zwaan demo reveals five insights
- 2023-05-26 US (AZ): Scientists assemble first complete genetic sequence for blackberries
- 2023-05-26 CAN (BC): Newly-expanded Applied Genomics Center grows student research at KPU
- 2023-05-25 The market of vegetables in Ukraine decreased by 30% in 2023
- 2023-05-24 “Growers no longer have to wait to see what a plant will do”
- 2023-05-17 Syngenta launches 'ToBRFV Resistant' seal
- 2023-05-15 Australia’s first genetically modified fruit sent for approval
- 2023-05-11 Tweaking vegetables’ genes could make them tastier
- 2023-05-11 Ghana: Scientist advocates investment in local seed production
- 2023-05-10 "No bumblebees in our greenhouse"
- 2023-05-10 Protein that controls strawberry's red color identified
- 2023-05-09 Cornell scientists invent broccoli that thrives in steamy Central New York summers
- 2023-05-09 New varieties aim to bring high resistance to ToBRFV
- 2023-05-08 "Strawberry seeds enable faster cultivation with lower disease transmission risks"
- 2023-05-04 Canada moves forward without mandatory disclosure of gene edited seeds
- 2023-05-04 Zucchiolo: a new greenhouse vegetable for the European market
- 2023-05-01 US (GA): Plant geneticist uncovers what influences tomato shape
- 2023-04-28 Austrian Parliament amends seed patent law
- 2023-04-28 Syngenta Group reports growing sales in first quarter