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Growing Crops With Less Water

21 March 2009
This is the VOA Special English Development Report.

Scientists are working to develop crop plants that can reduce the amount of water used for agriculture. Almost sixty percent of the world's freshwater withdrawals from rivers, lakes and other water resources go toward irrigating fields.

Scientists are using biotechnology as well as traditional breeding methods to develop water-saving crops to feed a growing world.

Thomas Carter
Thomas Carter
Thomas "Tommy" Carter is a plant scientist in North Carolina. He works for the Agricultural Research Service in the United States Department of Agriculture. He leads Team Drought, a group of researchers at five universities. They have been using conventional breeding methods to develop and test soybeans that can grow well under dry conditions.

Tommy Carter started working on drought-resistant soybeans in nineteen eighty-one. His research has taken him as far as China, where soybeans have been grown for thousands of years.

Farmers in the United States, however, have grown soybeans for only about a century. Tommy Carter says the soybeans they grow are for the most part genetically similar. More differences, or diversification, could better protect crops against climate changes that can reduce production. Those changes include water shortages which could increase from global warming.

The Agriculture Department has a soybean germplasm collection, a collection of genetic material passed from one generation to the next. Members of Team Drought studied more than two thousand five hundred examples from the collection.

They looked at ones from the ancestral home of soybeans, Asia. They searched for germplasms that could keep plants from weakening and wilting during hot, dry summers in the United States.

Tommy Carter says they found only five. But these slow-wilting lines, he says, produce four to eight bushels more than normal soybeans under drought conditions. The yield depends on location and environment.

Scientists are also working on other plants that either use less water or use it better, or both. For example, companies like Monsanto, DuPont and Syngenta have been developing corn with reduced water needs. Monsanto expects to be ready in a few years to market its first corn seeds genetically engineered to resist drought.

And that's the VOA Special English Development Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. You can find transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our reports -- and write comments -- at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.     



Comments:

1.

That is a common issue in Vietnam.
Submitted by: vu duc liem (vietnam)
04-24-2009 - 16:45:46

2. Let's Work Together to Solve the Fundamental Problems

Great job our scientists have been doing! Solute! Furthermore, all of us should sit down to ponder over why we have to face such a problem? Why our ancestors as food-gatherers did not when their living conditions were much more primitive than we do today? I believe it has much to do with our own man-made misconduct to the enironment. So let's do something together to tackle the problem fundamentally to correct our behavior and model of activities and do not jut let our dear scientists to do the homework alone. Thank you!
Submitted by: TANG Qixiong (The People's Republic of China)
04-16-2009 - 06:13:50

3.

thanks alot
Submitted by: rozita (iran)
04-09-2009 - 15:11:06

4. good

VOAs special English is very helpful for me to study English! Thank a lot.
Submitted by: huynh quang bk (Viet Nam)
04-04-2009 - 15:24:22

5.

Thank you for your work for people who want to study English =)
Submitted by: Becky (South Korea)
03-31-2009 - 10:54:09

6. Hope

As we know that, milion people on the world have been living with short of fresh water and food. So if we develope a agriculture with less water, people will have more water and food.
Submitted by: beTa (VietNam)
03-30-2009 - 13:26:29

7. :-)

Thank you for a Good Aticle.
Submitted by: David Hyun (South Korea)
03-30-2009 - 06:46:20

8.

thanks voanews.com a for form this web to help english learner having a wonderful address to practice every day.thanks for your share.bless all you!
Submitted by: vo hoang long (vietnam)
03-30-2009 - 05:20:44

9. a good report

It's a good subject for me to practice EL ! Thanks a lot !
Submitted by: huu tinh (Vietnam)
03-28-2009 - 12:08:26

10. Good article!!

Soybeans is from China. My country also have other agriculture plants.Welcome to come China.
Submitted by: Guan Zhangjie (China)
03-28-2009 - 03:08:41

11. genetically engineered

I am also concerned about the influence of genetically engineered crops against human body and ecological system. It would be nice to introduce us about the influence of the GM crop, both benefit and non-benefit in VOA.
Submitted by: K.Y (Japan)
03-28-2009 - 00:44:25

12. comment

thanks for wanderful program i can study every day readin and listening these magnifics historys'''
Submitted by: Elsa arcia (New Jersey)
03-27-2009 - 20:27:07

13. thanx

a nice audio.
Submitted by: Shi xueqian (China)
03-26-2009 - 13:06:17

14. reduced water resources

Our water resources over the world decrease speedy due to the global warming. Even though most of scientists inform the world, and explain to some realities .Nobody does not take a responsibility .Tomorrow will be too late. The governments have to make laws to pretend abused water using. If we want to keep our nose clean, we should make an emergency plans, and lead to improve our strategies by making determined decisions. It is time to make a confession to ourselves. We should think again before open the tap.
Submitted by: Tigin Danyal (Turkey)
03-24-2009 - 14:58:52

15. :)

nice text and good knowing. thanks
Submitted by: xue bo (P.R.China)
03-24-2009 - 04:30:18

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