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Université Wageningen

Country: Netherlands

Université Wageningen

3 Projects, page 1 of 1
  • Funder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-15-HDIM-0001
    Funder Contribution: 248,508 EUR
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  • Funder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-13-ADAP-0004
    Funder Contribution: 369,772 EUR

    Nickel (Ni) is a heavy metal widely used in the industry to produce stainless steel and rechargeable batteries that are used in everyday life. However, the Ni mining industry leads to environmental pollution and has a direct impact on biodiversity. In the context of a sustainable development, it is crucial to limit the negative effects of Ni production on the environment. Phytoremediation and phytomining are promising technologies that use plants to remove Ni from polluted soil and to extract Ni for commercial purpose. Today, the development of these eco-friendly strategies is still limited by our succinct knowledge on the mechanisms of Ni accumulation in plants. The goal of the EvoMetoNicks project is to improve our basic knowledge about molecular mechanisms involved in Ni resistance and hyperaccumulation in plants. Ni is an essential element but becomes toxic at high concentration for most living organisms. Surprisingly, 400 plant species found on serpentine (ultramafic) soils rich in Ni in Europe, New Caledonia and Cuba, are able to accumulate tremendous amount (>0.1%) of Ni in leaves. Sixty of these Ni hyperaccumulators are endemic to the ultramafic soils of New Caledonia that is a biodiversity hotspot but also one of the most important producers of Ni in the world. Ni hyperaccumulators are receiving an increasing interest because of their potential use in phytoremediation and phytomining technologies. In this project, we will take advantage of the important diversity found in Ni hyperaccumulators worldwide to obtain a novel and broad vision on the fundamental mechanisms involved in Ni accumulation and adaptation in plants. We have selected evolutionary distant Ni hyperaccumulators including Noccaea caerulescens, a species of the Brassicaceae family developed as a model plant to study metal accumulation, and two hyperaccumulators endemic to New Caledonia, Psychotria gabriellae (Rubiaceae) and Geissois pruinosa (Cunoniaceae) that will be better characterized at the physiological and molecular levels in this project. Using Next Generation Sequencing strategies, we will compare the transcriptomes of these species with those of closely related non-accumulating species to identify molecular mechanisms linked to Ni accumulation and adaptation that were conserved during evolution of higher plants or on the contrary that are more divergent in plant species. Among candidate genes, we will focus our functional studies on genes and pathways that are involved in transport, chelation, detoxification and sequestration of Ni. We think this project will identify target genes and molecules important for Ni accumulation in plants and therefore will be valuable for the development of phytoremediation and phytomining technologies. Also, according to the Nagoya Protocol for the access to genetic resources and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits, the EvoMetoNicks project will conform to local and international environmental laws for the protection of plant species and we will share the knowledge and experience generated by this project with students and a more general audience through lectures and conferences in New Caledonia.

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  • Funder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-18-LEAP-0002
    Funder Contribution: 199,975 EUR

    The irrigated and improved lowland agricultural systems are not resulting neither in a significant increase in resilience and food security for smallholders nor in a motor for economic growth in West Africa (WA). However, the potential benefits of water-managed agricultural systems are enormous in WA. Irrigated agriculture increases cropping intensity, diversity and productivity; contributes to develop food markets and agroindustry; and generates employment; conversely, it has environmental implications. It is hypothesized here that Sustainable Intensification (SI) of watermanaged agricultural systems is the pathway to a new, dynamic, inclusive, market-oriented, technology-based agriculture. SI is not achieved through stand-alone technology but by combining technologies and governance to design productions systems that are best adapted to local conditions. The consortium, integrated by five African institutions (SARI and UDS, in Ghana, ISRA and UGB in Senegal, and INERA in Burkina Faso), five European institutions (IRD and CIRAD in France, WUR in The Netherlands, CIHEAM-Bari in Italy, and CSIC in Spain, the coordinator), and five associate partners (CILSS, AECID and three companies), envisions SI as the springboard that will transform irrigation and lowland communities into resilient, food-secure communities improving their wellbeing through economic growth. The project aspires to change the development paradigm for irrigated and other water-managed agricultures in WA and identify environmental-friendly systems in WA and Spain. The identification of current performance gaps and benchmarks and of a new set of SI solutions will be followed by co-innovation within the project innovation hubs, working simultaneously at different scales (from plot to scheme/improved lowland system). These hubs, where women and youth will be preferred target adopters, will catalyze the change in their respective areas of influence, with a multiplier effect supported by an ICT platform.

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