Pests, pathogens and unpredictable rainfall: Global challenges for sustainable food production


Posted on 17 January 2017

Grand Challenges Lecture Series

25 January 2017 | 6.30 - 7.30pm | Keele Hall - The Salvin Room

The Grand Challenges lecture series is delighted to welcome its next speaker to Keele University, Professor Sue Hartley. 

The Institute of Liberal Arts and Sciences (ILAS) Grand Challenges Lecture series explores complex questions which confront local, national, regional and global communities. These grand challenges will require creative and innovative interdisciplinary thinking and collaboration to suggest and predict possible resolutions.

About the lecture

In this talk, Professor Sue Hartley explores the inter-disciplinary approaches which may provide new sustainable methods of crop protection and improved resilience to climate change.

Globally around one third of our crops are lost to pests and diseases, even with the use of modern pesticides, whilst the production of sufficient, safe and nutritious food is increasingly threatened by unpredictable and extreme weather. Given the likely 70% increase in demand for food by 2050, we urgently need new ways to protect our crops and to make them more resilient to the increasing likelihood of drought as temperatures rise and weather patterns change. The ability of our crops to defend against pests and survive drought has been reduced because we have selected varieties with high yield at the expense of other beneficial traits, but it still exists in wild ancestors, offering us the possibility of restoring these capabilities to our crops in the future.

About Professor Sue Hartley

Professor Sue Hartley is Director of the York Environmental Sustainability Institute at the University of York, Chair of the RCUK Sustainable Agriculture Research Innovation Club, a Trustee of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the President of the British Ecological Society.

Refreshments will be available in the Great Hall, adjacent to the Salvin Room on the day of the lecture from 6.00pm onwards.

This lecture is free and all are welcome to attend.