It is important that plant breeders have
a good background in biotechnology
and that they work with specialists
in the field. The marriage between
the ancient profession of plant breeding
and the new field of biotechnology
will be good for future advances in
crop improvement.
LIFE BOX 3.2. P. STEPHEN BAENZIGER
P. Stephen Baenziger, Eugene W. Price Distinguished Professor,
University of Nebraska
Stephen Baenzigerwith Dr. Sanjaya Rajaram
of ICARDA and CIMMYT looking at an in situ
collection of wild barley in Syria, near the
origin of barley.
“Give us this day our daily bread.”
Although I am not particularly religious,
those words have always moved me.
When I was in high school, I thought
of becoming a human nutritionist so
that I could work on world hunger.
The U.S. Senate had a subcommittee
led by Sen. McGovern on hunger in
America that catalogued the dismal
state of the poor and Paul Ehrlich pub-
lished “The Population Bomb” high-
lighting, quite incorrectly, that massive
famines were set to occur in the 1970s.
In college, I was a biochemistry major
which was the pre-med major, a group
of students whom I never really
enjoyed being with because they
seemed more interested in their grades
than the knowledge (getting into
medical school was very competitive),
so I gravitated to plant biology, a field
that the pre-meds did not know existed.
The professors in plant biology were
spectacular (Winslow Briggs, Lawrence
Bogorad) and I decided that, as a nutri-
tionist, I would better define a problem,
but not really solve its root causes.
Food would still be limiting. Hence, I
decided to work on the production side
to ensure that there was ample food for
those who needed it. At this time, the
Green Revolution in wheat, led by
Norman (Norm) Borlaug of CIMMYT,
and in rice, led by Henry (Hank)
Beachell, then Gurdev Khush of IRRI,
had greatly increased the food supply
and the predicted famines never
occurred. In graduate school, David
Glover, who was working on breeding
high lysine maize (now referred to as
quality protein maize) offered me an
assistantship and sealed my fate to
become a plant breeder. It was also the
last time that I worked on maize. My
first job was to develop small grains
(wheat and barley) germplasm with
improved disease resistance and toler-
ance to acid soils (note I only audited
one plant pathology course in graduate
school and never took a soils course)
80 PLANT BREEDING