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Next articleVolgend Artikel

 26 jan 2017 09:40 

Peruvian native Potatoes to join world's largest banana collection in KU Leuven, Belgium


For 30 years, KU Leuven (University of Leuven, Belgium) has been home to an impressive collection of bananas that already contains over 1,500 varieties and is the biggest in its kind.

The collection is recognized as world heritage and will soon be expanded with another food crop: 8,000 potato varieties of the International Potato Centre in Peru are coming to Leuven.

Professor Rony Swennen of the KU Leuven Laboratory of Tropical Crop Improvement, which manages the banana collection:

"Here in Leuven, we have 1,536 of the estimated 2,000 banana varieties."

The collection now falls under the umbrella of the United Nations as the 'Bioversity Musa Germplasm International Transit Centre'.

To preserve this many varieties, the bioengineers use a cold chamber - containing test tubes with small banana plantlets of 3 to 4 centimetres—and cryotanks with plant stem cells in liquid nitrogen at a temperature of -196 degrees Celsius.

Rony Swennen:

"By using this method of cryopreservation, we can preserve the stem cells for hundreds of years and even regenerate them to a normal plantlet."

The CIP, the International Potato Centre in Peru, manages a collection of potatoes, sweet potatoes and other tuber and root crops from the Andes, and is convinced of the success of the technology used in Leuven.

Rony Swennen:

"They also use cryopreservation to preserve potatoes and will soon send us a copy of their own collection of 8,000 potato varieties."
(Click to enlarge)

8,000 native potato varieties of the International Potato Centre in Peru will soon join these banana plantlets (close-up) at the KU in Leuven, Belgium (Courtesy: Bioversity International)

Cryopreservation can also be used for many other plants:

Rony Swennen:

"You can apply this technique to all plants that don't produce their own seeds, such as most bananas, or plants whose seeds are difficult to stock, such as coconuts."

"By doing so, you could build a counterpart to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, the world seed bank on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen."


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