A hundred years ago, the plant scientist Arthur Watkins launched a remarkable project. He began collecting samples of wheat from all
over the globe, nagging consuls and business agents across the British empire and beyond to supply him with grain from local markets.
His persistence was exceptional and, a century later, it is about to reap dramatic results. A UK-Chinese collaboration has sequenced the DNA of all the 827 kinds of wheat, assembled by Watkins, that have been nurtured at the John Innes Centre near Norwich for most of the past century.
In doing so, scientists have created a genetic goldmine by pinpointing previously unknown genes that are now being used to create hardy varieties with improved yields that could help feed Earth’s swelling population.