Brainfood: Biodiversity & production, Tertiary tomato, Maya collapse, Restoration opportunities, Mixtures, Synchronous crop failure, Boswellia future, Soya diversity, Genetic load, Domestication, Ag & biodiversity, Cotton domestication, Food preservation

One Reply to “Brainfood: Biodiversity & production, Tertiary tomato, Maya collapse, Restoration opportunities, Mixtures, Synchronous crop failure, Boswellia future, Soya diversity, Genetic load, Domestication, Ag & biodiversity, Cotton domestication, Food preservation”

  1. “Grazing animals drove domestication of grain crops”: this complements our LAM paper on large-seeded cereal domestication. In both cases – large and also small seeded grasses – the key is the natural prevalence of monodominant vegetation prior to domestication – called here “dense homogenous clusters of endozoochoric plants”. If monodominant vegetation (`easily harvested’) was the basis of cereal domestication they why on earth are crop monocultures somehow wrong? It now seems that cereal monocultures are as natural as you could wish for.
    Also, all the predictions that monocultures are unnatural and will therefore collapse under pest and disease pressure (an essential part of the heavily-promoted agroecological paradigm) are unfounded. Agroecologists need to go back to the drawing-board and insert some real ecology into their increasingly shaky claims.

Leave a Reply to Dave Wood Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *