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News

Tuesday, 02 Mar 2021

An impressive body of evidence published this week reveals the answer to a mystery that has puzzled plant scientists for more than 30 years: the role of the molecule suberin in the leaves of some of our most productive crops.

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Friday, 12 Feb 2021

A team of scientists have measured the relative importance of the different obstacles that carbon dioxide (CO2) encounters in its voyage from the atmosphere to the interior of plant cells. This research leading method provides much needed information that will help to increase the yield of important food crops.

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Thursday, 28 Jan 2021

Threatened Australian animal and plant species have been given a major lifeline, thanks to new funding for a new database that contains 100-years of flora and fauna DNA.

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Sunday, 23 Aug 2020

Research into the self-destruction of cells in humans and plants could lead to treatments for brain diseases and the development of disease-resistant plants.

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Owen Atkin at the opening of CEAT. Image Sharyn Wragg
Saturday, 15 Aug 2020

Professor Owen Atkin is a Group Leader at RSB Plant Sciences, the Vice Chancellor's Entrepreneurial Professor at ANU, and the Director of the Centre for Entrepreneurial Agri-Technology (CEAT) - a collaboration between ANU and CSIRO, with investment from the ACT Government.

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Crop research
Tuesday, 14 Jul 2020

Research led by scientists at The Australian National University (ANU) could lead to major improvements in crop production.

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Events

A group of nine diverse people smiling and posing in front of a colorful mural outdoors.
16 Oct 2023 | 12:30pm

Biodiversity rests on a foundation of adaptive and neutral variation within populations and species, that interact in communities or coexist in assemblages, to define ecosystems that provide habitat and life support services including a stable climate. New technologies span this biodiversity pyramid and allow rapid and

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Two images displaying molecular models: on the left, "AvrM14" labeled as an mRNA decapping effector in dark purple and gray shades; on the right, "MoNudix" described as a phosphate starvation inducing effector, shown in red, blue, and white with a multicolored molecule at the center.
13 Oct 2023 | 3:30pm

Agricultural crop production is continually challenged by plant-pathogenic fungi, jeopardizing global food security. Central to plant-fungal interactions are small proteins called effectors, which can be secreted by pathogens into plant cells to promote disease.

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A woman smiling at the camera with a traditional Japanese sliding door background.
28 Sep 2023 | 3:30pm

Jenny Mortimer is Associate Professor of Plant Synthetic Biology at the University of Adelaide, Australia, in the School of Agriculture, Food and Wine & The Waite Research Institute.

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A man in a lab coat and gloves holds a small plant with yellow flowers in a laboratory.
13 Sep 2023 | 12pm

One of society’s greatest challenges is sequestering vast amounts of carbon to avoid dangerous climate change without driving competition for land and resources.

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A man wearing glasses and a color-blocked sweater standing indoors and smiling at the camera.
6 Sep 2023 | 12pm

Photosynthesis and leaf respiration are key metabolic processes for plant growth and their carbon exchange with the atmosphere are the largest within the global carbon cycle.

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3D rendering of a complex protein structure with atoms represented by colored spheres against a gray background.
30 Aug 2023 | 12pm

Fungal pathogens are the main causative agents of disease in plants. Fusarium oxysporum is a diverse fungal pathogen able to infect a wide plant host range.

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