Crop diversity

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A panel of different breeds of corn showing diversity in the colour of the kernels.

Crop diversity is the variance in genetic and phenotypic characteristics of plants used in agriculture. Crops may vary in seed size, branching pattern, in height, flower color, fruiting time, or flavor. They may also vary in less obvious characteristics such as their response to heat, cold or drought, or their ability to resist specific diseases and pests. It is possible to discover variation in almost every conceivable trait, including nutritional qualities, preparation and cooking techniques, and of course how a crop tastes. And if a trait cannot be found in the crop itself, it can often be found in a wild relative of the crop; a plant that has similar species that have not been farmed or used in agriculture, but exist in the wild.[1]

Diversity in a crop can also result from different growing conditions: a crop growing in nutrient poor soil is likely to be shorter than a crop growing in more fertile soil. In addition, and perhaps most importantly, diversity of a harvested plant can be the result of genetic differences: a crop may have genes conferring early maturity or disease resistance.[2] It is these heritable traits that are of special interest as they are passed on from generation to generation and collectively determine a crop’s overall characteristics and future potential. Through combining genes for different traits in desired combinations, plant breeders are able to develop new crop varieties to meet specific conditions. A new variety might, for example, be higher yielding, more disease resistant and have a longer shelf life than the varieties from which it was bred. The practical use of crop diversity goes back to early agricultural methods of crop rotation and fallow fields, planting and harvesting one type of crop on a plot of land one year, and using a different crop the next based on differences in a plant's nutrient needs. Both farmers and scientists must continually draw on the irreplaceable resource of genetic diversity to ensure productive harvests, as genetic variability provides farmers resilience to pests and diseases and allows scientists access to a more diverse genetic bank. Diversification of harvests and maintaining wild biodiversity in crop relatives influence many aspects of human and global interaction, being important for environmental and species sustainability.[3]

Benefits to the environment

The loss of biodiversity is considered one of today’s most serious environmental concerns by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.[4] According to some estimates, if current trends persist, as many as half of all plant species could face extinction.[5] Among the many threatened species are wild relatives of our crops – species that could contribute invaluable traits to future crop varieties. It has been estimated that 6% of wild relatives of cereal crops (wheat, maize, rice, sorghum etc.) are under threat as are 18% of legume species (the wild relatives of beans, peas and lentils) and 13% of species within the botanical family that includes potato, tomato, eggplant, and pepper.[6] Some recent research, however, questions the crop diversity erosion thesis with data drawn from commercially available vegetable and apple varieties.[7]:1053–54

The wise use of crop genetic diversity in plant breeding can contribute significantly to protecting the environment. Crop varieties that are resistant to pests and diseases can reduce the need for application of harmful pesticides more vigorous varieties can better compete with weeds;[8] reducing the need for applying herbicides as in the case study at Aarhus University in Denmark using more robust maize;[9] drought resistant plants can help save water through reducing the need for irrigation;[10] deeper rooting varieties can help stabilize soils; and varieties that are more efficient in their use of nutrients require less fertilizer.[11] Most importantly, perhaps, productive agricultural systems reduce or eliminate the need to cut down forest or clear fragile lands to create more farmland for food production.

Crop diversity and the economy

Agriculture is the economic foundation of most countries, and for developing countries the most likely source of economic growth. Growth is most rapid where agricultural productivity has risen the most, and the reverse is also true. Growth in agriculture, although beneficial for the wider economy, benefits the poor most, and by providing affordable food these benefits extend beyond the 70% of the world’s poorest people who live in rural areas and for whose livelihoods agriculture remains central.[12] Ensuring agriculture is able to play this fundamental role requires a range of improvements including: the growing of higher value crops, promoting value-adding activities through, for example, improved processing, expanding access to markets, and lowering food prices through increasing production, processing and marketing efficiency, particularly for subsistence and very low income farming families.[13] Fundamental to all of these potential solutions is crop diversity – the diversity that enables farmers and plant breeders to develop higher yielding, more productive varieties having improved quality characteristics required by farmers and desired by consumers. They can breed varieties better suited to particular processing methods or that store longer or that can be transported with less loss.[2] They can produce varieties that resist pests and diseases and are drought tolerant, providing more protection against crop failure and better insulating poor farmers from risk.[14] Agriculture’s part in fighting poverty is complex, but without the genetic diversity found within crops, it cannot fulfill its potential.

Disease threats to crops with low genetic diversity

One particular threat to mass-producing plants for harvest is their susceptibility to diseases. Generally speaking, a species has a range of genetic variability that allows for individuals and/or populations within that species to survive should a stressor or disturbance occur. In the case of agriculture, this is a tricky business to ensure, as seeds are planted under uniform conditions. For example, monocultural agriculture potentially elicits low crop diversity (especially if the seeds were mass-produced or cloned). It is possible that a single pest or disease could wipe out entire areas of a crop due to this uniformity.[15] One of the more historically known examples of harvests that suffered from low crop diversity was the Irish Potato Famine of 1845-1847.Another example is when a disease caused by a fungus affected the 1970 US corn crop causing a loss of over one billion dollars in production. If the corn acreage hadn't been such a monoculture, the fungus wouldn't have been able to spread as rapidly, as it would have encountered barriers of genetically resistant plants.[16]

One growing danger to present day agriculture is something called wheat rust: the name given from the reddish spores, it is a fungus that attaches to plants and breaks them down for food. A new form of the wheat disease - stem rust, strain Ug99 - has spread from Africa across to the Arabian Peninsula. This development was summarized on the January 16th 2007 by the international research centers Borlaug Global Rust Initiative and the Agricultural Research Service of the United States Department of Agriculture over 2 years of observation after its initial outbreak.[17] The Ug99 stem rust has recently proven to be even more virulent than other forms. Observations from field trials in Kenya showed that more than 85% of wheat samples, including cultivars from the major wheat producing regions in the world, have succumbed to the pest.[17] This is a serious pest alert for one of the major food crops of the world. The key to overcome the threat is genetic resistance found in certain wheat varieties. As Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug puts it: “We know what to do and how to do it. All we need are the financial resources, scientific cooperation and political will to contain this threat to world food security.”

Reports from Burundi and Angola warn of another looming food crisis partly caused by outbreaks of the African Cassava Mosaic Virus (ACMD).[18] Creating a “mosaic” of decay on the plants leaves, ACMD is responsible for the loss of a million tons of food each year. The Famine Early Warning Network of USAID reports from Angola that pockets of food insecurity exist in a number of districts partly due to the impacts of mosaic virus on the cassava crop. Likewise FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations) has warned about food insecurity in north and east central Burundi and one of the factors causing the precarious situation is declining yam harvests and the losses of cassava crops to the mosaic virus.[19] CMD also affects people already exposed to malnutrition and with limited coping mechanisms. CMD continues to be prevalent in all the main cassava-growing areas in the Great Lakes region of east Africa, causing between 20 and 90 percent crop losses in the Congo.[20] Breeders and relief agencies work together to fight the disease, and the FAO emergency relief and rehabilitation program is engaged in a project to assist vulnerable returnee populations in the African Great Lakes Region through mass propagation and distribution of CMD resistant or highly tolerant cassava planting materials.

A well known occurrence of disease susceptibility in crops lacking diversity concerns the Gros Michel, a seedless banana that saw world marketing in the 1940s. As the market demand became high for this particular species, growers and farmers of the Gros Michel banana began to use this species almost exclusively. Genetically, these bananas are duplicates of every other in their species due to its self-pollinating reproductive style,[12] and because of this lack of genetic diversity, are now virtually extinct due to a single fungus; Panama Disease. This fungus (also known as Fusarium wilt), which infected Gros Michel banana crops in the 1950s, completely wiped out the Gros Michel as the predecessor to the current, and most popular, banana on the market: the Cavendish.

Organizations, technology and solutions

The implications of crop diversity are at both the local and world level, and numerous organizations are emerging with great global backing in response to this ideology. International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI – now known as Bioversity International), the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (ITTA), the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative, and the International Network for Improvement of Banana and Plantain (INIBAP) are a few of the most prominent. Members of the United Nations, at the World Summit on Sustainable Development 2002 at Johannesburg, said that crop diversity is in danger of being lost if measures are not taken.[4] One such step taken in the action against the loss of biodiversity among crops is called gene banking. There are a number of organizations that enlist teams of local farmers to grow native varieties, particularly those that are threatened by extinction due to lack of modern-day use. There are also local, national and international efforts to preserve agricultural genetic resources through ex situ (off-site) methods such as seed and sperm banks for further research and/or crop breeding. Some of the major germplasm storage efforts include:

  • The Global Crop Diversity Trust is an independent international organisation which exists to ensure the conservation and availability of crop diversity for food security worldwide. It was established through a partnership between the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) acting through Bioversity International.
  • The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) is a consortium of International Agriculture Research Centers (IARC) and others that each conduct research on and preserve germplasm from a particular crop or animal species. The CGIAR holds one of the world's largest off site collections of plant genetic resources in trust for the world community. It contains over 500,000 accessions of more than 3,000 crop, forage, and agro-forestry species. The collection includes farmers' varieties and improved varieties and, in substantial measure, the wild species from which those varieties were created.[5]
  • National germplasm storage centers including the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation, India's National Bureau of Animal Genetic Resources (NBAGR), the Taiwan Livestock Research Institute, and the Australian Network of Plant Genetic Resource Centers.[21][22][23][24]
  • Organizations such as the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the World Conservation Union (IUCN) are non-profit organizations that provide funding and other support to off site and on site conservation efforts. The wise use of crop genetic diversity in plant breeding and genetic modification can also contribute significantly to protecting the biodiversity in crops. Crop varieties with specifically modified genes grow resistances to pests and diseases. One successful example of this is the insertion of the gene from the soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis.
  • Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is a soil bacterium that produces a natural insecticide toxin.
  • Genes from Bt can be inserted into crop plants to make them capable of producing an insecticidal toxin and therefore a resistance to certain pests.
  • There are no known adverse human health effects associated with Bt corn.
  • Bt corn can adversely affect non-target insects if they are closely related to the target pest, as is the case with Monarch butterfly. These adverse effects are considered minor, relative to those associated with the alternative of blanket insecticide applications.[25]

See also

References

  1. Crop Wild Relatives “Global Portal.” Bioversity International, Dec 5 2008
  2. 2.0 2.1 Imbruce, Valerie. “Bringing Southeast Asia to the Southeast United States: New forms of alternative agriculture in Homestead, Florida.” Agriculture and Human Values Vol. 24, no. 1, pp. 41–59. Mar 2007
  3. Jarvis, Devra I. and Camplain, Dindo M. “Crop genetic diversity to reduce pests and diseases on-farm: Participatory diagnosis guidelines Version I.” BioversityTechnical Bulletin No. 12, Bioversity International. October 2004
  4. 4.0 4.1 United Nations. World Summit on Sustainable Development. August 29, 2002
  5. 5.0 5.1 Associated Press. “Threat seen to half of Earth's plant species.” The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee, WI). November 1, 2002
  6. Crop Wild Relatives “Global Portal.” Bioversity International, Dec 5 200
  7. Heald, Paul J.; Susannah Chapman (2012), "Veggie Tales: Pernicious Myths About Patents, Innovation, and Crop Diversity in the Twentieth Century", University of Illinois Law Review 2012 (4): 1051–1102, retrieved 2013-03-10 
  8. Kropff, M.J. “Project: Enhanced biodiversity and weed suppression in agro-ecosystems.” Crop and Weed Ecology Group (WUR), METIS Wageningen University (2001-2005)
  9. Melander, Bo. “Maize cropping with less herbicide.” Integrated Weed Management, Case study 1. ENDURE, September 2008
  10. Nautiyal, S; Kaechele, H. “Conservation of crop diversity for sustainable landscape development.” Management of Environmental Quality. Vol. 18, no. 5, pp. 514–530. 2007
  11. Smith, Linda. “GMOs – A Crop Technology Whose Time Has Come.” Fleishman and Hillard. June 11, 2008
  12. 12.0 12.1 Yares, Kat. “What Country Consumes the Most Bananas?” eHow Articles and Online News. April 2007. Updated January, 2009 www.ehow.com/about_4685394_what-country-consumes-bananas.html
  13. Oxfam International. Agriculture Campaign. http://www.oxfam.org/en/campaigns/agriculture
  14. Smale, Melinda and King, Amanda. “What is Diversity Worth to Farmers?” Briefs 13-18. Bioversity International. November 2005
  15. Martinez-Castillo, J. “Genetic erosion and in situ conservation of Lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus L.) landraces in its Mesoamerican diversity center.” Genetic Resources and Crop evolution. Vol. 55, Issue 7, pp. 1065–1077. November 2008
  16. muir, patricia. "Why does genetic diversity within and among crops matter?". Retrieved September 30, 2013. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 “Crops.” Environmental Literacy Council. www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/2.html, updated April 3, 2008
  18. ICTVdB Management. “African cassava mosaic virus. In: ICTVdB - The Universal Virus Database,” version 4. Büchen-Osmond, C. (Ed), Columbia University, New York, USA 2006
  19. FAOSTAT. Video on Agriculture Activities in Developing Nations. www.faostat.fao.org/site/591/default.aspx
  20. IRIN “CONGO: Disease devastates cassava crop, threatens widespread hunger.” Integrated Regional Information Networks, Nairobi, Kenya. November 13, 2008
  21. U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation. www.ars.usda.gov/main/site_main.htm?modecode=54-02-05-00
  22. India's National Bureau of Animal Genetic Resources
  23. Taiwan Livestock Research Institute, Xinhua, Tainan
  24. Australian Network of Plant Genetic Resource Centres
  25. Peirs, F.B. “Bt Corn: Health and the Environment.” Extension entomologist and professor, bioagricultural sciences and pest management. 6/02. Reviewed 4/07. Colorado State University http://www.ext.colostate.edu/PUBS/CROPS/00707.html
  26. Seeds of Survival

External links

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