|
Garden Variety
Crop improvement, environmental sustainability and
higher farm incomes all depend on agricultural biodiversity - as
does simply consuming a healthy, balanced diet.
Agricultural biodiversity is well understood to be a source of
desirable traits. The genetic bases of disease resistance, for
example, are sought in the vast array of agricultural biodiversity
and then bred into existing crop cultivars and livestock breeds to
create new cultivars and breeds that are better able to thrive
under stress. This kind of scientific breeding will remain
important as the world grapples with feeding more people a better
diet using fewer resources. However, agricultural biodiversity can
also deliver better nutrition, enhanced resilience, greater
sustainability, and higher farm incomes, all of which offer
pathways out of poverty.
Nutrition is perhaps the most important. More than 60 years
after the start of the Green Revolution, hunger still stalks more
than a billion people, and 2 billion people, mostly young women and
children, suffer the "hidden hunger" of micronutrient
deficiency.
The problem is not simply the lack of proteins or calories, but
the lack of diversity in the diet, which is one way to guarantee of
an adequate supply of micronutrients. Very good evidence from
several studies, mostly in the developed world but increasingly
from developing countries, indicates that a diverse diet protects
people from several non-communicable diseases and is associated
with a longer, healthier, more productive life.
Non-communicable diseases such as obesity, type 2 diabetes,
heart disease and cancer were long thought of as diseases of
affluence, but they are spreading most quickly in low- and
middle-income countries, where 80% of the deaths from them occur.
Current approaches to the problems of malnutrition are clearly not
working. Agricultural biodiversity as the basis of healthy diets
and resilient food systems offers a fresh approach.
In Kenya, people traditionally ate more than 200 species of
leafy vegetables. Almost all are much more nutritious than the
cabbage and kale that were often the only green vegetables for sale
in cities, but their wider use is stymied by perceptions of
backwardness, supplies that are erratic and unhygienic, and the
ignorance of younger adults, especially in cities, about how to
prepare them.
Working with a range of partners, Bioversity International
trained Kenyan farmers to grow traditional leafy vegetables and
worked on quality control and supply chains. Supermarkets were
enlisted to help make the produce available in cities, and colorful
leaflets offered recipes for preparing them. Well-known
entertainers and government figures endorsed traditional foods on
mass media. The result was an increase in deliveries to markets
from 30 tons per month to 400 tons per month 3 years later. The
retail value of the trade is estimated to be US$1.5 million weekly,
and the incomes of farm families supplying the vegetables have
increased by a factor of 2 to 20.
Although the vegetable species and some intervention techniques
are specific to East Africa, the general methods and ideas behind
this initiative are applicable globally. Similar projects promoting
Andean grains in Bolivia and Peru, nutritious millets in India and
Nepal, and nutrient-rich fruits in the Pacific are making
considerable headway.
When the World Health Organization (WHO) and others first
sounded the alarm about micronutrient deficiency, they said that
dietary diversity was the preferred option for tackling the
problem. This original emphasis was slowly overtaken by a much more
clinical approach, which saw each deficiency as a distinct disease
to be cured by administering a specific supplement. Supplements,
fortified foods and biofortified staples currently rule, but the
original food-based solutions advocated by WHO and others need to
be reassessed. The CGIAR's proposed Mega Program on Agriculture
for Improved Health and Nutrition will go a long way toward
reasserting the primacy of food-based approaches, including
biofortification where appropriate, and will help policymakers
understand that there are alternative ways to tackle malnutrition
that often provide other benefits as well.
Ecosystem complexity is known to go hand in hand with
resilience, and this applies to agricultural ecosystems. Growing
different varieties of crop species can control pest and disease
outbreaks, augmenting farm profitability, and also allows the best
use of diverse growing conditions. Access to a range of cultivars
gives farmers more options for dealing with capricious weather, as
a variety that avoids drought or flood by maturing quickly can mean
the difference between life and death. Livestock and fish add to
human nutrition and can also contribute to soil fertility and farm
incomes. Additionally, agricultural biodiversity will be essential
for adapting agriculture to climate change.
The multiple benefits of making greater use of agricultural
biodiversity in these various ways will be seen in long-term
improvements that will be self-sustaining, as healthier communities
engage in a diversified and less destructive agriculture that
offers a nutritionally superior diet, which in turn keeps
communities healthier - all with profound effects on economic
development.
|