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New Crop Research & Development

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Presentation on theme: "New Crop Research & Development"— Presentation transcript:

1 New Crop Research & Development
Oglala Lakota College Agriculture & Natural Resource Dept. By Leslie Rae Henry Summer 2007 Teacher Education Training Program

2 Where do I begin? Factors to consider Need a Champion(s) of the Effort
Time Industry Interest Academic Priority Political Priority Financial Support

3 Feasibility (Market, Economic, & Biological)
What is the product and how much does it cost? Who is the consumer? What are the characteristics of the demand? What are the competing products and how much do they cost? What advantages does the new product have? Are there product specific questions?

4 Germplasm (Seed Stock) Resources
National Genetic Resources Advisory Council (NGRAC) National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation (NCGRP) International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center

5 Seed Industry in U.S. Agriculture
Thomas Malthus (1798) predicted Geometric population growth Arithmetic food production increases Lead to chronic food shortages Dire consequences for the future of humanity Failed to materialize Sixfold increase in population Worldwide agriculture production increased Mechanical, chemical, & biological innovations Driven by agriculture research and development

6 Seed Hybrid crops (corn in the 1930s)
Green Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s Modern biotechnology Genetic engineering Seed Patents

7 Private Sector Research and development is changing form public goals
Research priorities are changing Profit motives U. S. Patents on Seed germplasm (crop seeds) Monsanto vs. Canadian Farmer (73 yrs old)

8 Plant Variety Protection Certificates
USDA’s PVPO– similar to patents issued for crops Intent is to benefit both consumer and producer of improved crop varieties Seed producers benefit from exclusive rights Purity, breeding, marketing, distribution and sales Obtain a return on investment of R & D 10 to 15 years to produce a marketable product Annual cost for small breeding program $250,000 (1980s) New varieties costs between $2.0 million and $2.5 million (1980s)

9 PVP Certificates Began in the 1970’s
By ,584 certificates issued for four major crops 1,078 – soybeans ~84% 648 – corn ~100% 568 – wheat~68% 290 – cotton ~87% Majority held by private sector ~84%

10 Biotechnology The application of biological science to affect living things Thousands of years of human history 20th century discovery of DNA New period of biological research Application of genetic science to plants and animals = “biotechnology” Plant breeding and biotechnology are complementary

11 Major Crops Biotechnology Applied
Corn Soybean Cotton Wheat Rice

12 Top Twenty Private Industry
Monsanto Pioneer AgrEvo Dupont ARS DeKalb Calgene Semnis Vegetable Seed DNA Plant Tech Northrup-King University of Idaho Upjohn Aventis Iowa State University Asgrow Novartis Seeds ProdiGene Stine Biotechnology Rutgers University Cargill

13 Field Release Approvals for Corn
Monsanto Pioneer DuPont AgrEvo DeKalb Northrup-King ProdiGene Novartis Seeds Iowa State University Stine Biotechnology

14 Monsanto 1988 – 2000 Approvals for over 1,200 new varieties of corn, soybeans, cotton, and wheat Leader in development Followed by DuPont/Pioneer, and AgrEvo

15 Seed Sales (1997) Pioneer Hi-Bred = $1,178 million
Monsanto = $541 million Novartis = $262 million

16 Process of Seed Production, Marketing, and Distribution
Plant Breeding R & D Seed Production Seed Conditioning Seed Marketing and Distribution


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