

We did certainly get pretty active in the run-up to that. GROSS: So when there's a war, an impending disaster, do you try rescue seeds from there? Like the war in Syria which has decimated so much of Syria.įOWLER: Well, we - yes. But mostly, countries and institutions around the world that are involved in this have been saving seeds, freezing them for the long term and for short-term use, and plant breeding programs and other kinds of biological research. Some crops can't be conserved that way, and there are other means for doing that. And typically, over the years, most of that conservation of crop diversity has been done by conserving seeds. We want to save all the traits that plant diversity has. We don't want to eliminate or reduce those colors. And those are the options that we have for the future, just like an artist would have a lot of different colors on his or her palette.

So if we want our crops to be productive in the future, if we want them adapted to new climates or to whatever pest or disease is out there, then we need to conserve that diversity because the diversity is really a diversity of traits. But it's the biological foundation of agriculture, and it's the raw material for plant evolution, for plant breeding for the future. And most people don't really stop to think of why crop diversity is important enough to be conserving. So tell us what the point of the seed vault is.ĬARY FOWLER: The point is to conserve crop diversity. He's also the author of a book about the Global Seed Vault called, "Seeds On Ice".Ĭary Fowler, welcome to FRESH AIR. In the '90s, he led the team that conducted the U.N.'s first global assessment of the state of the world's crop diversity. Part of what makes the vault safe is its location, just 700 miles from the North Pole.įowler conceptualized the vault, headed the committee that developed the plan for the facility and is the founding chair of the international council that has overseen the vault since its inception. It stores and protects nearly a million samples of crop varieties from about 5,000 different species with the mission of safeguarding the diversity of our agricultural crops in perpetuity, in spite of war, pestilence and climate change. He prefers the official name, the Global Seed Vault. My guest Cary Fowler is the creator of the vault, but he doesn't much like the doomsday title. It's been called the doomsday vault, the vault that will preserve the seeds of life after a catastrophic event. These seeds were donated by almost every country in the world, so there is a massive variety of seeds represented in the Global Seed Vault.TERRY GROSS: This is is FRESH AIR. The vault currently holds more than 860,000 seed samples as of this writing. That equals a maximum of 2.5 billion seeds that can be stored in the Vault, according to Global Crop Diversity Trust, an international group that works in conjunction with the Norway government to manage the seeds in the vault. It is built to store a whopping 4.5 million varieties of crops, with each variety containing around 500 seeds. The Global Seed Vault can hold massive amounts of seeds. If that variety is in the Seed Vault, it’s as safe as it can be.” Capacity Today, fires, floods, natural disaster, war, human error, accidents, funding cuts - none of these need cause the extinction of a crop variety. In the past the loss of a variety meant extinction for that variety and any unique trait it might have contained. “If something happens to one of those facilities and if their seed samples are destroyed, then there is a backup copy in the Seed Vault. “The seeds in the Seed Vault are duplicate copies of collections held in national and other seedbanks around the world,” said Fowler.
