El Batán, Mexico
July, 2005
Now that
all of CIMMYT’s new program directors have been officially
installed, it is time to get acquainted with them, as well as
their ideas and plans for the programs. This month we feature
Jonathan Crouch, director of the Genetic Resources Program.
“Probably
the best drought team in the world,” raves Jonathan Crouch,
director of CIMMYT’s Genetic
Resources Program, referring to his new CIMMYT colleagues. Ever
since working in the Negev desert breeding heat and salinity
tolerant potatoes, Crouch has been interested in harnessing
biotechnologies for improving dryland agriculture. “There are
many exciting advances in genomics that now offer the
possibility of helping to breed better crops for these harsh
environments” he says.
He started his
career, however, in a very different environment, the swamps of
West Africa, using tissue culture and molecular markers in the
breeding of plantains and bananas at the
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in
Nigeria. Soon realizing that he needed more practical experience
in plant breeding, he joined the private sector to set up a
European canola breeding program. This gave him a better
perspective of the realities of biotechnologies in modern crop
breeding. From there, going to the
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
(ICRISAT), it was obvious that in many developing countries
a chasm exists between the outputs of international public goods
research and the inputs of private sector product development.
“By working with the private sector, we hope to populate that
gap with interdisciplinary scientists, who will bring prestige
to this area of research,” says Crouch, who also champions a
similar approach in his half-time position in the management
group of the
Generation Challenge Programme.
The Genetic
Resources program aims to foster more diverse and intimate
relationships with multinational corporations and small- and
medium-sized enterprises. “We also want to build a strong
product development pipeline from the genebank to the farmer.
The Genetic Resources program will start the reaction, which
will then reach farmers through our regional programs and
national partners, giving them the traits and tools they need.”
This global
research program houses three important aspects of CIMMYT’s
work—the maize and wheat genebanks, the biotechnology group, and
prebreeding activities, which create suitable starting material
for plant breeding programs from tens of thousands of possible
unimproved plants. Crouch is excited about this organizational
unit, the first of its kind in the CGIAR: “It offers tremendous
opportunities for capturing synergies in all disciplines. The
regional programs identify priorities, such as drought
tolerance, and we work on identifying novel useful genetic
variation and the tools required to efficiently manipulate it.”
And
considering he is building on CIMMYT’s existing legacy of
quality biotechnological science, Crouch’s confidence in this
program is not unfounded. |