Jawahir durum wheat becomes Morocco’s new hope

Published 2025년 7월 2일

Tridge summary

As efforts to multiply the seeds of the new Jawahir durum wheat variety continue, farmers in drought-stricken areas of Morocco are getting a first glimpse of its potential. This is what Gulf Agriculture reports. With the first rains falling in most parts of Morocco more than two months after the usual start of winter, the

Original content

2024-25 agricultural season in the southern African country is once again proving to be very dry. This threatens Morocco’s cereal production, including durum wheat, which is vital for food security. Durum wheat, used to make couscous, bread and pasta, is of great importance in Morocco, as it is around the world. In North Africa, people consume durum wheat products daily to get essential calories and protein. The dry climate is nothing new for Morocco’s wheat farmers, who have managed to produce the grain with little water for centuries. However, record droughts over the past decade have left farmers struggling to make a living. Where golden harvests once dominated, brown, drought-stricken fields now dominate. The Jawahir durum wheat variety, which means “precious stone” in Arabic, was bred using genes from Iraqi Triticum araraticum, a wild ancestor of durum wheat that was stored in the gene bank of the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA). ...

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