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Goat grass helps feed the world

Goat grass is only tasty to goats, but its genome could could play a big part in the future of food and farming.
Kim Cousins
Kim Cousins
Freelance Journalist
Goat grass helps feed the world

The shared history of wheat and humans is part of global research aiming to help provide future food security.

Murdoch University’s Professor Rudi Appels, along with an international community of collaborators, is studying the genome of goat grass—a weed that cross-pollinated with wheat thousands of years ago.

He says the research will help today’s farmers deal more easily with extreme weather and plant disease by growing plants genetically suitable to the conditions. This means they then have the ability to grow more food.

Wheat: a short history

“Humans and wheat share a remarkably parallel evolutionary history,” Rudi says.

It all began around 10,000 years ago, when people began harvesting wild plants such as emmer and einkorn. They then ground the grain, turning it into flour.

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10,000 years ago, people began harvesting wild plants such as emmer to turn into flour

10,000 years ago, people began harvesting wild plants such as emmer to turn into flour

2000 years later, emmer cross-pollinated with goat grass. On its own, goat grass is a tough, inedible weed. but when the genes mixed with emmer, the resulting offspring became an early type of wheat.

Over time, this plant baby evolved to become the wheat we use for most of our bread today.

“In Neolithic times, goat grass grew from Syria to Afghanistan and survived in different environments,” Rudi says.

“The emmer and goat grass plant would have looked different and also produced softer grains, making it easier to grind.

“It was generally women who would manage crops and grind the grains, and they would have kept the seeds to plant again.”

Goat grass and genomes

Ancient farmers may have been good at finding the best plants to feed people, but they didn’t have the knowledge of genomes that we have today.

Rudi says the goat grass genome is good to study because it has a lot of genetic variation.

“We now know that the genes from goat grass contributed to bread wheat’s tolerance of cold and diseases,” he says.

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Goat grass genes contributed to wheat’s tolerance of cold and diseases

Image credit: Patrick McGuire / UC Davis
Goat grass genes contributed to wheat’s tolerance of cold and diseases

Rudi says another handy characteristic of the goat grass genome is its ability to switch up its genes.

Wheat crops attract a few major diseases, like stem rust, caused by pathogens. It’s often a battle between the farmer and the pathogen, and studying the goat grass genome’s ‘jumping genes’ could help.

“We’ve found that bits of the genome change, but this takes place during a longer, evolutionary timeframe.”

Not only could this research weed out disease in the future, there’s potential for it to help us bake a better loaf of bread — all by using the right genes for the job.

Kim Cousins
About the author
Kim Cousins
​Kim Cousins is a freelance journalist who would have become a scientist if she was better at maths. Instead, she's spent her career writing for newspapers across Australia and now teaches and studies social sciences at university. She loves nerding out with books and learning new things about the world.
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​Kim Cousins is a freelance journalist who would have become a scientist if she was better at maths. Instead, she's spent her career writing for newspapers across Australia and now teaches and studies social sciences at university. She loves nerding out with books and learning new things about the world.
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