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Science

Doomsday vault gets 25,000 new seeds

Chick peas, fava beans and other seeds from a facility in Syria are among the 25,000 new samples being deposited this week in an Arctic seed vault built to protect food crops from wars and natural disasters, officials said Tuesday.

Amaranth, fava beans get 'backed up' in Norway's Arctic seed bank

Chick peas, fava beans and other seeds from a facility in Syria are among the 25,000 new samples being deposited this week in an Arctic seed vault built to protect food crops from wars and natural disasters, officials said Tuesday.

The latest additions mean that the Svalbard Global Seed Vaulta master backup to the world's other seed bankshas now secured more than 740,000 samples since it opened in a remote Norwegian archipelago in 2008.

That represents an estimated three-quarters of the biological diversity of the world's major food crops, said Cary Fowler, executive director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which maintains the vault with Norway's government and the Nordic Genetic Resources Center.

With the shipment from the Syria-based International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas, almost its entire collection is now backed up in Svalbard, Fowler told The Associated Press.

"I think the events unfolding in Syria obviously underline the importance of having safety duplication outside of a country," he said, adding the facility had not been damaged in the military crackdown on an anti-government uprising.

He noted that wars destroyed seed banks in Iraq and Afghanistan. Another one in Egypt was looted during last year's uprising.

The Svalbard Global Seed Vaultsometimes referred to as a doomsday vaultis designed to withstand global warming, earthquakes and even nuclear strikes.

1st seeds from Armenia and Tajikistan

Samples shipped this year also included wheat from a range of climates and conditions in Armenia and the Pamir mountains of Tajikistanthe first seeds from the two former Soviet republics.

Wild cropsancient relatives of domesticated cropsare of particular interest because of their resilience to harsh climatic conditions.

"They are very toughthey have to be to survive," Fowler said. "They have traits such as drought tolerance or ability to withstand pest and disease, which we think will be very valuable in the future in breeding climate-ready varieties."

The U.S. seed bank is the biggest national contributor to the Svalbard vault. This year it is sending 12,801 samples, including amaranth, once a nutritious grain for Aztecs and Incas; and subspecies of barley that took root in the U.S. Pacific Northwest after being imported from Poland in 1938.