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  • Deep in a refrigerated vault on the snowy hillside of a remote island in the arctic

  • circle, a library of seeds may be humanity’s only hope for botanical salvation.

  • Hi everyone, Crystal here for DNews with some good news about the apocalypse. It’s probably

  • already here but the earth’s plants may survive and through them, humans could too.

  • If we draw an analogy between the apocalypse and a rapid, mass extinction of the number

  • and variety of living things on Earth; we may just be the middle of one. Mass extinctions,

  • like the one that killed the Dinosaurs, are characterized by a narrowing of biodiversity

  • due to environmental change. And some scientists say that’s happening right now. Estimates

  • place the current rate of extinction of plants and animals at anywhere from 100 to 1000 times

  • faster than our recent geological past, and this rate appears poised to increase as 1)

  • our globe continues to warm, 2) human populations continue to expand, and 3) geographical regions

  • continue to be devastated by wars and natural disaster.

  • Humans have been concerned about protecting the earth’s biodiversity since biblical

  • times. Why else would we have a story about animals lining up 2 by 2 to be preserved on

  • a giant ark? “Biodiversityrefers to the number and variety of living species within

  • an ecosystem. And this variety, specifically among plants, is crucial for human survival

  • since plants are the source of our nutrients and energy, as well as providing shelter and

  • the starting point for many medicines.

  • Seed banks, like the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, are one way to preserve the biodiversity

  • of commercially significant crops, and of wild native plants. These libraries of seeds

  • can be used to reintroduce species into existing habitats, or to strengthen genetically depleted

  • populations. But, maintaining a one stop shop of viable seeds can be costly and challenging.

  • Recognizing the need for a more secure, global effort, an organization called The Crop Trust,

  • with support from many well known private foundations, has stepped in. Their most dramatic

  • program maintains an enormous warehouse with the capacity to house a cache of 4.5 million

  • varieties of seeds. Located on a Norwegian island north of the arctic circle, this vault

  • is envisioned as a fail safe; a back-up to smaller more local seed banks.

  • And in fact, that is exactly how it is being used. The first and only seed withdrawal was

  • made by Syria who used seeds they had previously deposited in Svalbard to reconstruct a seed

  • bank recently destroyed by civil war.

  • Currently, more than 864,000 species of plant life from over 100 countries are being preserved

  • within the cold, dry interior of this vault. And its contents are estimated to approach

  • half of the known macroflora like trees and grains, on the planet. As this is a global

  • project with diplomatic implications, concerns over seed ownership have naturally arisen.

  • For now, the vault acts as a high tech storage facility, filtering out possible genetic duplications

  • in deposits but also ensuring that only the original depositor will have access to their

  • contribution. This restriction is to protect the library of heirloom seeds from exploitation

  • and for-profit manipulation by biotech companies or agribusiness.

  • Not everyone agrees that locking up the seeds to every known plant on earth is the way to

  • go. Some critics say, libraries like these are just historical records, offering simply

  • a snapshot in evolutionary time, and that the plants preserved by this method would

  • have a low chance of survival after reintroduction. Plants resulting from the preserved seeds

  • wouldn’t have had a chance to evolve with the demands of their environment and they

  • may lack resistance to modern pests and disease.

  • Opponents of the seed bank approach often focus on commercial crops and advocate for

  • preservation of seed diversity in the fields. This in situ preservation requires the long-term

  • cooperation of farming communities to cultivate a variety of the same crops over generations.

  • But, for example, with emphasis on profit, it seems unlikely farmers would be able or

  • willing to keep growing every known variety of corn if they were only making big money

  • on one. Debate continues as to which path is best.

  • Large libraries of genetic diversity like the Svalbard Global Seed Vault inspire the

  • imagination. Will astronauts of the future be eating ancient forms of terrestrial plants

  • that just happen to survive the demands of space? The existence of home grown lettuce

  • on the International Space Station saysmaybe”. Certainly, select microflora like cyanobacteria

  • will have a one way ticket to Mars when the time comes. Evolution needs a starting point,

  • and whether it is a seed bank or a library of biodiversity with galactic significance,

  • when it comes to life, more is better. And may the best seed win.

Deep in a refrigerated vault on the snowy hillside of a remote island in the arctic

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