Drought Tolerance Veik

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Kate Veik Brief 4 Draft 2 FOR GRADE, REC’D 04/30/10 Sorghum is no Superman. The crop has proven a better tolerance to prolonged water shortage, or drought, than cereals common to the United States such as corn, wheat and barley. But, drought still has an effect on sorghum crops. All plants have little pores, like the pores on your skin. Those pores are called stomates. Through the stomates, plants exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide through photosynthesis and turn the carbon dioxide into sugar. Photosynthesis promotes plant growth. Drought essentially plugs the stomates, stunting the growth and yields of the sorghum, according to Bill Rooney, an INTSORMIL scientist and associate professor of sorghum breeding and genetics at Texas A&M University. “It’s like closing your nose or your mouth,” Rooney said. “You can’t breath.” When the stomates are plugged, sorghum slows down because it has less energy to burn. Sorghum’s task becomes

Transcript of Drought Tolerance Veik

Page 1: Drought  Tolerance  Veik

Kate VeikBrief 4 Draft 2 FOR GRADE, REC’D 04/30/10

Sorghum is no Superman.

The crop has proven a better tolerance to prolonged water shortage, or drought,

than cereals common to the United States such as corn, wheat and barley. But, drought

still has an effect on sorghum crops.

All plants have little pores, like the pores on your skin. Those pores are called

stomates. Through the stomates, plants exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide through

photosynthesis and turn the carbon dioxide into sugar. Photosynthesis promotes plant

growth.

Drought essentially plugs the stomates, stunting the growth and yields of the

sorghum, according to Bill Rooney, an INTSORMIL scientist and associate professor of

sorghum breeding and genetics at Texas A&M University.

“It’s like closing your nose or your mouth,” Rooney said. “You can’t breath.”

When the stomates are plugged, sorghum slows down because it has less energy

to burn. Sorghum’s task becomes retaining water to survive rather than to grow so the

sorghum’s growth either slows or the sorghum dies.

Pearl millet is more tolerant of drought than sorghum. Millet’s better tolerance is

illustrated in African farming.

“In areas where they can’t grow corn, they grow sorghum,” Rooney said. “In

areas where they can’t grow sorghum, they grow millet.”

Sub-Saharan Africa experiences the most consistent drought but there is also

inconsistent drought in Southern Africa.

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INTSORMIL scientists are working on increasing drought tolerance in sorghum

by selecting certain traits scientists know are drought-resistant and bringing those traits

into sorghum.

The Stay Green trait keeps the sorghum plant alive after it has started to produce

grain, or flowered, in a drought.

By infusing the Stay Green trait into the sorghum, INTSORMIL scientists can

help to increase the yield and quality (super power??) of sorghum crops in areas that

experience consistent and crippling drought.