The Taming of Plants: Domestication of the Food Species We Eat 

Talk

The Taming of Plants: Domestication of the Food Species We Eat

when 6:30‐8pm where NYUAD Campus, Conference Center who NYU Abu Dhabi Institute
Open to the Public

The Taming of Plants: Domestication of the Food Species We Eat 

Domestication is a co-evolutionary process that occurs when wild plants are brought into cultivation by humans starting about 12,000 years ago, leading to the origin of new species that we depend on for our food and clothing. How did humans accomplish this? How do crop plants evolve to adapt to humans and new environments? What genes are important for crops to adapt as they spread around the world? This talk examines how insights into the origin and variation of crop species can help us in developing new varieties (and possibly even new species) to deal with current and future environmental challenges in a sustainable manner.

Speaker
Michael Purugganan, Silver Professor; Professor of Biology; Dean for Science, Faculty of Arts and Science, NYU; Center for Genomics and Systems Biology, NYU & NYUAD

Hosted by
NYU Abu Dhabi Institute


Register for this Event






Join our events mailing lists

Always be the first to know about what's going on in our community. Sign up for one of our newsletters and receive information on a wide variety of events such as exhibition, lectures, films, art performances, discussions and sessences.