Business Day

Quinoa has potential to aid food security

- Agency Staff

Scientists have unveiled the near-complete genome of quinoa, a grain cultivated centuries ago by Incas in the Andes that scientists say could help feed a hungry world.

Best known outside its native region to health food fans in North America and Europe, quinoa is highly nutritious, gluten-free and packed with essential amino acids, fibre, vitamins and minerals, experts say.

It also scores lower than other crops on the glycaemic index, a measure of how quickly foods raise blood sugar levels — a major concern for diabetics. The grain thrives at any altitude up to 4,000m above sea level, in conditions that would leave most food plants struggling.

“Quinoa is incredibly resilient and can grow in poor or salty soils,” said Mark Tester, a professor at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia and leader of the consortium of scholars that decoded the plant’s genome.

“It could provide a healthy, nutritious food source for the world using land and water that currently cannot be used.”

And yet, global consumptio­n remains incidental compared to wheat, rice, barley or maize — less than 100,000 tonnes per year compared to hundreds of millions of tonnes for each of the other major grains and cereals.

“One problem with quinoa is that the plant naturally produces bitter-tasting seeds,” Tester said.

The bitterness — a natural defence against birds and other pests — comes from chemical compounds called saponins. The process for removing these chemicals is labour-intensive and costly, and requires ample use of water.

Another constraint is that quinoa plants tend to have small seed heads and long stalks that can collapse in strong wind or heavy rain.

First grown by humans thousands of years ago in the high plateau around Lake Titicaca in the Andes, quinoa is still barely domesticat­ed, the researcher­s say. Other major crop plants have been bred for centuries or, more recently, geneticall­y modified to combine optimal traits to boost yield and bolster resistance to pests and climate change.

“Quinoa has great potential to enhance global food security,” Tester says.

The fact that some strains grow well at temperatur­es up to 38°C, also bodes well for regions hit hardest by global warming.

Tester’s team has already pinpointed genes, including one that controls the production of saponins, that could be altered to enhance quality and yields.

South American varieties could probably be made sweeter with a single gene change. Most quinoa is grown in three Andean countries: Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia. The US and Canada account for nearly 70% of exports, followed by France, the Netherland­s and Germany.

The price of quinoa has nearly tripled in recent years due to increased demand.

If printed, the sequence of letters correspond­ing to the quinoa genome — comprising 1.3-billion molecular building blocks — would take up 500,000 pages.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Growing demand: Health food fans in North America and Europe use quinoa for its nutrition.
/Reuters Growing demand: Health food fans in North America and Europe use quinoa for its nutrition.

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