Joanne Chory: How supercharged plants could slow climate change
Recognized as one of the greatest scientific innovators of our time, Joanne Chory studies the genetic codes of plants. Her goal: to use plants to help fight climate change. Full bio
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actually play a role
that faces mankind today,
I had been working for 30 years or more
this contribution to a bigger problem.
that I have done in my lab
did in my lab over the last 30 years
the really big experiment,
too much CO2 in the atmosphere
to just suck up CO2.
for over 500 million years.
I want to tell you about.
my two children a better world
in the right direction,
for the last 15 years,
that I want to do this now,
to really be part of this team.
because we have fun.
five people trying to save the planet,
a lot of time together.
of CO2 as a pollutant.
as the villain in the novel, you know?
I see the other side of CO2, actually.
I think we remember, as plant biologists,
do this process called photosynthesis.
and other photosynthetic microbes
that was in the atmosphere.
came from air, basically.
is they use the energy in sunlight,
that is really important
photosynthetic microbes
of CO2 that we put up
we're not doing a great job
a little ourselves,
is put most of the CO2 into sugars.
of the growing season comes,
to suck out the CO2 from the atmosphere
in the atmosphere as CO2.
the CO2 they bring in
a little more stable?
that plants make this product,
that is in all plant roots.
that's a carbon.
a perfect carbon storage device.
the carbon that gets fixed by the plant
better for the plant.
a biological solution to this problem?
30 or so years --
you're saying, "Why now?" --
that are in an organism in general.
that are in a plant
with the fact that we can do genomics
than we ever did before.
all life on earth is really related,
than other organisms.
that you know from one plant
that it'll do the same thing.
genetic tricks that came along,
that allows us to do editing
from the normal state in the plant.
I'm proposing a solution
organism on earth to do it -- plants.
three simple things from my talk, OK?
than they normally make,
a little better than what they are.
we can make more suberin --
that suberin likes to accumulate in.
we want the plants to have deeper roots.
"OK, make stable carbon,
if they make roots that go deep
on the surface of the soil.
we want to change:
and the last one, deep roots.
all those traits in one plant,
and we will do it,
in the model plant, Arabidopsis,
experiments much faster
where traits all add up
more suberin in those plants,
we're beginning to do this --
crop plants to do the work for us
behind the whole thing.
I feel pretty confident about that.
just in the last year,
that affect each of those three traits.
two out of the three,
to even combine within a trait
the amount of root
we expressed one gene
than the plant usually does on its own.
I wanted to show you.
of challenges, actually,
to actually buy the seeds,
these experiments,
even more than it is right now.
we have 11 billion people,
really going to be able to handle
from agriculture.
this competition for land.
carbon sequestration experiment
that are also going to be on the earth
causing loss of yield all over the earth.
want to buy seeds
checks and balances
when a plant actually makes more carbon
are actually depleted of carbon
on the earth right now.
those soils become enriched in carbon.
actually hold nitrogen
and they hold phosphate --
for plants to grow and have a good yield.
in the soil as well.
into little particles
we can get more carbon in that soil,
to measure all that,
us solve the problem.
a lot of land that we need to use,
the hard thing for us, I think,
rather than meet them,
no one can really deny --
everyone knows that.
and it's serious,
that we can do this.
as a character witness for plants.
that plants are going to do it for us,
is give them a little help,
a gold medal for humanity.
like -- what? -- wheat, corn, maybe rice,
more carbon than they currently do?
that number, really.
farmers have more fertile?
and a solution that can scale
the research in your lab
some of these pilots
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Joanne Chory - Plant geneticistRecognized as one of the greatest scientific innovators of our time, Joanne Chory studies the genetic codes of plants. Her goal: to use plants to help fight climate change.
Why you should listen
Joanne Chory grew up in Boston in a close-knit Lebanese-American family who helped her develop the self-confidence to venture into the unknown -- college away from home (where she fell in love with genetics) and graduate school where she learned the value of doing a good experiment and the joy that brings. Over three decades, she's built a career at the forefront of plant biology, pursuing fundamental questions of how plants perceive and adapt to changing environments.
Chory is the Director of the Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Laboratory at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. She's received many of science's top distinctions -- she is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator and a 2018 Breakthrough Prize winner, as well as winner of the 2018 Gruber Genetics Prize. Recently, she realized that her work could address the critical problem of climate change. Plants already take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere; we just need to help them adapt to storing the CO2 in a more stable form. With support from the Audacious Project at TED, she and her Salk colleagues are taking on this challenge in a project she sees as the culmination of her career. Chory is excited to take one more step into the unknown, with a chance to change our planet's future.
Joanne Chory | Speaker | TED.com