Harman Jaggi
@harmanjaggi.bsky.social
45 followers 54 following 9 posts
HMEI Postdoc, Princeton university. PhD '24 Stanford university. Interested in population dynamics, theoretical ecology, and traditional farming landscapes.
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harmanjaggi.bsky.social
Happy to share our research on traditional farming landscapes in northwest Himalaya is out in Science Advances! Thanks to my advisor Tulja & all the wonderful collaborators- Ale @ornithoale.bsky.social, Katie @kasolari.bsky.social, Akshata, Kullu, Rinchen, Lamaji. 1/7 www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Reposted by Harman Jaggi
evecologist.bsky.social
The Princeton Field Workshop is great opportunity for undergraduate students to learn ecological field skills and explore career paths! tinyurl.com/PFEW-2025
Reposted by Harman Jaggi
ornithoale.bsky.social
Check out our newest study published in Science Advances last Friday ❤️
stanforddoerr.bsky.social
With support from the Sustainability Accelerator at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability, researchers have shown that, compared to green peas, a variety of black peas with a 3,000-year legacy in the Trans-Himalayas is more nutritious and climate resilient.
Study reveals benefits of traditional Himalayan crops
Stanford researchers discovered that a nearly forgotten variety of black peas from the northwest Himalayas in India is genetically distinct from other peas and outperforms them.
stanford.io
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
A huge thanks to the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability for the accelerator grant that made this possible, and to the local community members who shared their knowledge, some of whom are co-authors and co-producers of this work. @stanforddoerr.bsky.social
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
We hope these findings can empower the farmers to revive and grow resilient traditional crops and diversify their production systems across mountain landscapes.
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
Our multipronged research underscores the importance of integrating traditional agricultural knowledge with ecological science to sustain agrobiodiversity, enhance climate resilience, and promote sustainable food systems.
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
Third, we find higher protein and micronutrient content such as iron, magnesium, and calcium in black peas compared to green peas.
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
Second, we provide the first whole-genome sequencing of black pea. Using spectral, hierarchical, and k-means clustering, we find black peas form distinct genetic clusters (from wild and domesticated subspecies) highlighting a complex cultural and environmental selection over thousands of years.
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
We examined black peas (an understudied, lesser-known crop) and barley from an ecological, genetic, nutritional and cultural lens. Our first finding is what local farmers knew all along: black peas require much less water to grow & outperform the introduced green pea in survival/reproductive traits.
harmanjaggi.bsky.social
Happy to share our research on traditional farming landscapes in northwest Himalaya is out in Science Advances! Thanks to my advisor Tulja & all the wonderful collaborators- Ale @ornithoale.bsky.social, Katie @kasolari.bsky.social, Akshata, Kullu, Rinchen, Lamaji. 1/7 www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...