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Scientists in Saudi Arabia map genome of date-palm tree

Scientists from Saudi Arabia and China said they have completed mapping the genome of the date-palm tree, whose fruit is a staple food in many regions.

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Saudi scientists attend the inauguration of the first Saudi Human Genome Project in the Middle East at the King Abdulaziz City for Science in Riyadh. Photo: AFP

Scientists from Saudi Arabia and China said they have completed mapping the genome of the date-palm tree, whose fruit is a staple food in many regions.

Scientists from Riyadh's King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology and China's Shenzhen-based BGI have been working on the project since 2008.

The sequencing could help increase productivity as well as prevent and help in the treatment of diseases affecting date palms, Saudi research institute head Mohammed al-Suwail said. on Sunday.

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The palm is widely cultivated across the Middle East and North Africa.

Saudi Arabia has 450 varieties of the 2,000 species known worldwide, according to genetic scientists.

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There are about 100 million date palms in the world, of which 10 per cent are in Saudi Arabia, which contributes 14 per cent of the world production of dates. In 2010, 20 scientists from both centres decoded the entire genetic makeup of the single-humped camel, camelus dromedarius, the omnipresent native of the Arabian peninsula.

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