Laura Boykin: How we're using DNA tech to help farmers fight crop diseases
TED Senior Fellow Laura Boykin uses technology to help farmers in East Africa have more food to feed their families. Full bio
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need more food.
farmers that feed us are hungry.
more diverse and inclusive.
the toughest challenges on the planet,
living in extreme poverty,
and inclusive teams on the planet
and how is it going to help end hunger?
putting that together is a job.
from a young age.
basketball in college.
was I needed a work-study job.
to my dorm room.
it was the biology building.
to work in the herbarium.
my basketball schedule.
to figure out what an herbarium was.
dead, dried plants.
for hours on end.
a computational biologist.
and biophysics group.
with the supercomputer,
of connected PCs on steroids,
of influenza and hepatitis C.
that I saw the power
and biology combined, for humanity.
of my scientific career
for farmers in Africa.
in the plight to save cassava.
feed 800 million people globally.
for their daily calories.
has enough cassava,
for important things like school fees,
are devastating cassava.
of over 600 plants.
of plant viruses
for millions of people.
need some help.
small-scale family farmers,
to feed their families,
when the rains come.
pests and pathogens.
some time on the ground
that could be helpful.
that are eaten for protein,
that are eaten for starch.
an entire year of income and food,
a long hunger season.
to plant in her field,
to those viruses and pathogens,
around the globe.
to uncover the complexities
for sub-Saharan Africa.
and far between on the continent,
battling on the front lines no choice
over weak internet
to get the results back to the farmer.
and more hunger.
portable DNA sequencer
in West Africa to fight Ebola.
in East Africa to help farmers?
replicate this on the farm.
get that to work in East Africa,
two of the best bottles of champagne
Kenya and Uganda,
we gave ourselves a team name --
Action Project.
and computing communities,
requirements needed
on this stage here as well.
closer to the problem,
what was wrong with her plant.
and pathogens she has in her field.
was we had to do a DNA extraction.
"Pretty Damn Quick Extraction."
in doing a DNA extraction
very expensive equipment,
and prepare it into a library,
genomic sequencer,
into a mini supercomputer,
into a portable battery pack.
of main power and internet,
on a small-scale family farm.
can also be a problem.
a computational biologist came in handy.
in a real-world, real-time way.
results in three hours
that we're having impact?
zero tons per hectare
for her family.
3,000 people in her village,
and also the solution.
farmer I've ever met.
to help them become more food secure.
I would ever do in my life
in three hours versus six months,
of diversity and inclusion in science.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Laura Boykin - Computational biologist, activistTED Senior Fellow Laura Boykin uses technology to help farmers in East Africa have more food to feed their families.
Why you should listen
Dr. Laura Boykin is a TED Senior Fellow, Gifted Citizen and computational biologist who uses genomics and supercomputing to help smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa control whiteflies and viruses, which cause devastation to the local cassava crops. Cassava is a staple food that feeds more than 800 million people globally.
Boykin also works in partnership with African scientists to train local communities in genomics and high-performance computing skills, with the aim of tackling future insect and viral outbreaks. Recently, she founded The Cassava Virus Action Project along with collaborators in east Africa to roll out portable DNA sequencing and analyses to farmers in the region. Their mission is to increase cassava yields for 500 million farmers.
Laura Boykin | Speaker | TED.com