Super Genes

Millets are the 'grains of the future'

Farmer Holding Millet CobsMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Millets 2.0

Celebrated as the grains of the future, and a solution to major global challenges like climate change, food poverty and a lack of nutrition, small-seeded millets have great potential. R&D on millets is currently focused on improving yield potential, adaptability to different environments, nutritional quality, and resistance to stresses.

Lab-Grown Millet Seedlings in Advanced Germination StageMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Millets get bumped up to first class

Crop improvement has been a major area of research in millets, with a focus on higher yield, fungal resistance, and resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses such as drought, salinity and temperature fluctuations. 

Millet postersMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Genomics and genome-assisted breeding plays a crucial role in modern breeding programs to enhance crop productivity.

Physiology of milletsMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

The millet genome project

Genomics is the study of all the genes (the genome) of a plant, including interactions of those genes with each other, and with the environment. Through the process of genome sequencing, scientists are able to gather new knowledge about these ancient grains, directly impacting crop productivity.

Sorghum FieldsMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

New millet varieties have new superpowers

Genetic interventions are being used successfully to enhance the nutritional and economic value of millets through biofortification, designing hybrids with desired traits, increasing bioavailability of micronutrients, and reducing antinutrients such as phytic acids and tannins.

Pearl Millet CobsMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Biofortification

Biofortified millets increase the micronutrient content multifold. Developed by Indian agriculture scientist, Mahalingam Govindraj, ‘Dhanshakti’ – the world’s first biofortified pearl millet (bajra) released in 2014 - has been fortified with iron and zinc and provides women with more than 80% of their daily recommended iron, while regular bajra varieties only provide 20%.

Millets in the FieldMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Millets, remixed

Dipping into the diverse genetic pool of millets allows for filtering out of undesirable traits, while retaining useful ones to create new hybrids that are higher yielding, climate- and disease-resistant, and have a longer shelf life. 

Millet postersMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Since 2018, 13 high-yielding varieties, including 4 bio-fortified varieties of millets, have been launched.

Different Types of MilletsMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

More of the good stuff, less of the bad stuff

While millets are rich in both micro- and macro-nutrients and fibre, anti nutrients present in millets reduce their bio-availability. Genomic editing can help overcome this by increasing the bioavailability of nutrients present in millets, while also suppressing harmful anti nutrients.

Millet postersMinistry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare

Leading the charge

There are a few institutes leading scientific research on millets in India - the Indian Institute of Millets Research (IIMR) based in Hyderabad; the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University as well as the local headquarters of the global International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics.

Recent government initiatives under India’s G20 Presidency, such as  MAHARISHI (Millets And Other Ancient Grains International Research Initiative) herald a new era of national and international research around millets.

Credits: Story

Text and images courtesy Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare, Government of India

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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