b'ance. By analysing the tetraploid genome, researchers can preciselysub-Saharan savannahs. The project focuses on underutilized leg-identify beneficial DNA, speeding up breeding and strengtheningumes like Bambara groundnut and pigeon pea, using climate-smart crop resilience. This approach can also be applied to other crops,agronomy to boost yields, resilience, and soil health for smallholder supporting global food security. farmers while strengthening UKWest Africa research collaboration.The Max Planck Institutes SyncSol project, funded with 9.1 mil- Tel Aviv University scientists found that stressed plants emit ultra-lion from the UKs ARIA, aims to create a universal chloroplastsonic clicks humans cant hear but animals likely can. Tomato and genome for nightshade crops. Led by Dr. Dunkelmann, it seeks totobacco plants produced dozens of sounds when dehydrated or cut, speed up breeding, enhance CO capture, produce pharmaceuticals,while healthy plants were mostly silent. AI could identify plant type and improve crop resilience, as part of ARIAs Synthetic Plantsand stress level from the audio, suggesting plants may talk more program exploring sustainable and ethical plant innovations. than we realize and offering potential for sensors to help farmers detect water needs.Danish Minister Jacob Jensen visited Svalbard on Aug. 1718 to review a NordGen seed shipment for the Global Seed Vault, includ- REAP2SOW, a 6.8M Dutch project led by Wageningen University, ing 19 Danish samples like wild carrot and turnips. The vault nowpromotes underused cropswhite lupin, quinoa, and aardakerto holds over 4,600 Danish seeds from 241 species. The visit high- create healthier, climate-friendly diets and restore soil. The initia-lighted long-term experiments monitoring seed viability, includingtive unites farmers, researchers, and companies to boost sustainable a 100-year Nordic study in Mine 3. cultivation, consumer adoption, and supportive policies, advancing national goals on emissions, biodiversity, and reduced soy imports.The UKs driest spring in nearly 70 years is stressing crops and live-stock. The James Hutton Institute is developing drought-tolerantA Nature study by 21 scientists outlines how transforming global crops, regenerative practices, and water-saving solutions to boostfood systems can reverse land degradation and combat climate climate resilience, protect yields, and support sustainable farmingchange. Key strategies include restoring 50% of degraded land by amid rising temperatures and increased wildfire risk. 2050, cutting food waste by 75%, and shifting toward sustainable seafood and seaweed to reduce land use. Combined, these measures could spare or restore ~44 Mkm of land (the size of Africa), cut Rothamsted Research and the UK-CGIAR Centre have launched13 Gt CO-e annually, and improve biodiversity, supporting UN AgVACS in Ghana and Nigeria to enhance climate adaptation inclimate, biodiversity, and desertification goals. Our sustainable way forwardAs \x1c st\x1cte-of-the-\x1crt fruit \x1cnd veget\x1cble breeding comp\x1cny, Rijk Zw\x1c\x1cn pl\x1cys \x1cn import\x1cnt role in the worlds food supply. However, its not just technology th\x1ct sets us\x1cp\x1crt. At Rijk Zw\x1c\x1cn, we believe the w\x1cy forw\x1crd lies in putting peoplerst. Therefore, e\x1cch seed th\x1ct le\x1cves Rijk Zw\x1c\x1cn is on \x1c journey to contribute to the dem\x1cndsof \x1cn ever-growing pl\x1cnet. To us, this is the sust\x1cin\x1cble w\x1cy forw\x1crd.Discover our values at rijkzwaan.comSEPTEMBER 2025|SEEDWORLD.COM/EUROPEISEED WORLD EUROPE I 47'