Speaker:  Professor Jane Langdale, University of Oxford

Date:  26 April 2018, 4:30 pm followed by a networking event

Location:  Discovery Centre, North Road, CSIRO Black Mountain, Canberra ACT

Contact:  Gonzalo.Estavillo@csiro.au

Register here

Discovered 50 years ago in Australia, C4 Photosynthesis is one of the most efficient ways plants transform sunlight into food. The C4 Rice Project is one of the scientific ‘Grand Challenges’ of the 21st Century. Due to predicted population increases and a general trend towards urbanisation, land that provided enough rice to feed 27 people in 2010 will need to support 43 by 2050. Introduction of ‘C4‘ traits into rice is predicted to increase photosynthetic efficiency by 50%, improve nitrogen use efficiency and double water use efficiency. The project therefore represents one of the most plausible approaches to enhancing crop yield and increasing resilience in the face of reduced land area, decreased use of fertilisers and less predictable supplies of water. Professor Jane Langdale will present the progress towards achieving this goal.

About the speaker

Jane Langdale is Professor of Plant Development in the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of Oxford. Her research focuses on understanding the genetic mechanisms that underpin how leaves develop and how they evolved. She is currently co-ordinator of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation funded C4 Rice Project. She is an elected Member of the European Molecular Biology Organisation and a Fellow of the Royal Society. Professor Langdale is visiting Australia in April 2018 on a CSIRO McMaster Fellowship and is co-sponsored by CoE in Translational Photosynthesis.