Integrating AI in seed science: Toward an intelligent design paradigm.
Zhang Y, Du J, Huang G, Zhao Y, Man P
Crop Improvement
Every seed packet you tuck into spring soil is the end product of decades of breeding decisions — AI is now accelerating that process so the next generation of tomatoes, beans, and grains can survive the hotter, drier summers already arriving in most gardens.
Scientists are using AI — the same kind of technology behind voice assistants and image recognition — to study seeds at a much deeper level than ever before. By analyzing enormous amounts of genetic and environmental data, AI can help predict which seeds will grow into healthier, more resilient plants. This review maps out where that work stands today and charts a path toward designing seeds almost like software, tailored to future climate conditions.
Key Findings
Global food production must scale to feed a projected 9.7 billion people by 2050, a target current agricultural productivity gains cannot meet without major innovation.
AI is being applied across multiple stages of seed science — from decoding genetic information to predicting how seeds will perform under real-world stress conditions like drought and heat.
The review introduces an 'AI for Science' paradigm that integrates machine learning, genomics, and seed biology into a unified framework for designing next-generation crop seeds.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers reviewed how artificial intelligence is transforming seed science, from analyzing genetic data to designing better crops. AI tools are being applied across the entire pipeline of seed development to help create crops that can withstand climate stress and feed a growing global population.
Abstract Preview
Global agricultural systems face mounting threats to food security from climate change, population growth, and land degradation, with current productivity gains insufficient to meet the demands of ...
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