Guardian angels for seeds
The seeds that you plant in your backyard garden next spring — and farmers sow in their fields — may have a guardian angel that helps them sprout, stay healthy, and grow to yield bountiful harvests. It's a thin coating of chemicals termed a "seed treatment" that can encourage seeds to germinate earlier in the season, resist insects and diseases, and convey other advantages. These new seed defenders are the topic of an article in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), ACS' weekly newsmagazine. C&EN Senior Business Editor Melody Voith describes a boom in developing and producing chemical coatings that act as built-in pesticides to protect seeds from destructive insects, fungi, and other pests. Seed treatments for protecting cereal, corn, and beet crops already are common in agriculture and are growing in popularity in an effort to safeguard genetically modified seeds, which are expensive. The worldwide seed treatment market now generates $1.5 billion yearly and is growing at 10 to 12 percent annually, according to the article.
Voith notes that scientists are also developing a new generation of seed treatments that use microorganisms to protect plants from pests and promote earlier, more vigorous growth. One company, for instance, produces a bacterial coating that kills disease-causing fungi while secreting a substance that promotes plant growth. Unlike chemical treatments, which last for weeks, these biologic seed defenders last for months.
Source: American Chemical Society
Related
- Researchers identify a process that regulates seed germinationWed, 11 Mar 2009, 18:23:38 EDT
- Even plants benefit from outsourcingFri, 7 Nov 2008, 10:30:07 EST
- It's not easy being greenWed, 18 May 2011, 18:37:45 EDT
- ARS sends third seed shipment to Norway seed vaultThu, 11 Mar 2010, 13:40:27 EST
- How spring-loaded filaree seeds self launchThu, 27 Jan 2011, 1:01:45 EST
Other sources
- Guardian angels for seedsfrom PhysorgWed, 10 Nov 2010, 14:31:11 EST
- Guardian angels for seedsfrom Science BlogWed, 10 Nov 2010, 13:10:18 EST
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