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Cover image of Genetic Glass Ceilings
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Genetic Glass Ceilings

Transgenics for Crop Biodiversity

Jonathan Gressel

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As the world’s population rises to an expected ten billion in the next few generations, the challenges of feeding humanity and maintaining an ecological balance will dramatically increase. Today we rely on just four crops for 80 percent of all consumed calories: wheat, rice, corn, and soybeans. Indeed, reliance on these four crops may also mean we are one global plant disease outbreak away from major famine.

In this revolutionary and controversial book, Jonathan Gressel argues that alternative plant crops lack the genetic diversity necessary for wider domestication and that even the Big Four...

As the world’s population rises to an expected ten billion in the next few generations, the challenges of feeding humanity and maintaining an ecological balance will dramatically increase. Today we rely on just four crops for 80 percent of all consumed calories: wheat, rice, corn, and soybeans. Indeed, reliance on these four crops may also mean we are one global plant disease outbreak away from major famine.

In this revolutionary and controversial book, Jonathan Gressel argues that alternative plant crops lack the genetic diversity necessary for wider domestication and that even the Big Four have reached a "genetic glass ceiling": no matter how much they are bred, there is simply not enough genetic diversity available to significantly improve their agricultural value. Gressel points the way through the glass ceiling by advocating transgenics—a technique where genes from one species are transferred to another. He maintains that with simple safeguards the technique is a safe solution to the genetic glass ceiling conundrum. Analyzing alternative crops—including palm oil, papaya, buckwheat, tef, and sorghum—Gressel demonstrates how gene manipulation could enhance their potential for widespread domestication and reduce our dependency on the Big Four. He also describes a number of ecological benefits that could be derived with the aid of transgenics.

A compelling synthesis of ideas from agronomy, medicine, breeding, physiology, population genetics, molecular biology, and biotechnology, Genetic Glass Ceilings presents transgenics as an inevitable and desperately necessary approach to securing and diversifying the world's food supply.

Reviews

Reviews

I urge you to read Jonny Gressel's book, Genetic Glass Ceilings. I have read the first nine chapters, to the point where he begins his discussion of specific case studies (papaya, tef buckwheat, and others). I have learned so much from Jonny's book. Jonny asks challenging questions and then discusses realistic, clear-eyed solutions to the questions—all about the genetic glass ceilings faced by plant breeders.

Offers refreshing hope of successfully feeding the world's population... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals.

Everyone who wants to learn and understand more about plant breeding and agricultural biotechnology should read Jonathan Gressel’s book. Its wealth of erudition and wisdom makes it worthy of recognition as a modern classic.

A compelling synthesis of ideas.

This book would serve as a good basis for a serious course in agronomy departments around the world.

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Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
488
ISBN
9780801887192
Illustration Description
10 halftones, 34 line drawings
Table of Contents

Foreword by Klaus Ammann: The Needs for Plant Biodiversity: The General Case
Preface
1. Why Crop Biodiversity?
2. Domestication: Reaching a Glass Ceiling
3. Transgenic Tools for Regaining Biodiversity

Foreword by Klaus Ammann: The Needs for Plant Biodiversity: The General Case
Preface
1. Why Crop Biodiversity?
2. Domestication: Reaching a Glass Ceiling
3. Transgenic Tools for Regaining Biodiversity: Breaching the Ceiling
4. Biosafety Considerations with Further Domesticated Crops
5. Introduction to Case Studies: Where the Ceiling Needs to be Breached
6. Evil Weevils or Us: Who Gets to Eat the Grain?
7. Kwashiorkor, Diseases, and Cancer: Needed: Food without Mycotoxins
8. Emergency Engineering of Standing Forage Crops to Contain Pandemics—Transient Redomestication
9. Meat and Fuel from Straw
10. Papaya: Saved by Transgenics
11. Palm Olive Oils: Healthier Palm Oil
12. Rice: A Major Crop Undergoing Continual Transgenic Further Domestication
13. Tef: The Crop for Dry Extremes
14. Buckwheat: The Crop for Poor Cold Extremes
15. Should Sorghum Be a Crop for the Birds and the Witches?
16. Oilseed Rape: Unfinished Domestication
17. Reinventing Safflower
18. Swollen Necks from Fonio Millet and Pearl Millet
19. Grass Pea: Take This Poison
20. Limits to Domestication: Dioscorea deltoidea
21. Tomato: Bring Back Flavr Savr: Conceptually
22. Orchids: Sustaining Beauty
23. Olives: and Other Allergenic, Messy Landscaping Species
Epilogue
References
Index

Author Bio