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		Back to the future: Scientists want 
		'rewilded' crops to boost agriculture 
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		[December 23, 2014] 
		By Chris Arsenault
 ROME (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - 
		Scientists should "re-wild" food crops by inserting lost genetic 
		properties of ancient, edible plants in order to boost agricultural 
		output for a growing population, a new study said.
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			 Important properties of wild plants, including varieties of wheat 
			and rice, have been unintentionally lost during thousands of years 
			of breeding. 
 When humans first domesticated wheat around 7500 BC, farmers chose 
			to use seeds based on a few selected traits, particularly their 
			yields.
 
 But such decisions, made by generations of farmers, could have 
			weakened the resilience of crops in the face new challenges such as 
			global warming, according to the study published on Tuesday in the 
			journal Trends in Plant Science.
 
 "We estimate that all crops would benefit from re-wilding," Michael 
			Broberg Palmgren, a scientist at the University of Copenhagen and 
			one of the study's authors, wrote in an email.
 
			 Re-wilded crops could become more drought tolerant, more resistant 
			to cold, diseases and pests and more efficient in accessing soil 
			nutrients, Palmgren wrote.
 The scientists suggest using biotechnology to re-insert desired 
			genes from wild varieties of popular crops into widely consumed 
			strains in order to improve food security.
 
 The plan is less controversial than other Genetically Modified 
			Organisms (GMOs) as it does not involve the transfer of genes 
			between unrelated organisms, Palmgren said.
 
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			Scientists are unsure how much more food could be produced if 
			farmers follows their advice.
 But they say that current problems such as climate change, 
			population growth and soil degradation add to the urgency of 
			harnessing the potential of ancient genetic material.
 
 (Reporting By Chris Arsenault; Editing by Ros Russell)
 
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