Arrant about (agricultural) biodiversity

There’s something happening out there; what it is ain’t exactly clear.

Over the past few days several people seem to have been talking in mystified terms about biodiversity; what it is, why it gets so little respect, what to do about that, whether it matters anyway. On Monday Luigi nibbled an IEED paper on biodiversity and the media. Mike Shanahan, a journalist for whom I have a lot of time, wondered why other journalists have “under-reported” the loss of biodiversity, and suggested that “researchers and policymakers have failed to communicate the issues”. A couple of days ago a blogger I hadn’t previously come across got into the issue repeatedly, most notably with What the Heck Is Biodiversity? And Why Should We Care?, which was prompted by Thomas Friedman’s new book — Hot, Flat and Crowded — and a new paper from Paul Ehrlich and Robert Pringle. Friedman’s book blurb doesn’t say so (which is ironic indeed) but the man himself thinks that the loss of biodiversity may be even more important than climate change. And Ehrlich and Pringle talk about “a grim future”. A little while ago Tyler Cowen, another person I respect enormously, asked to what extent is the ongoing loss of biodiversity a very serious problem?. Like Friedman, Cowen suspects that “in the long run this will prove a more important issue than global warming,” but he is “not sure”. Finally, and the reason to write this today, now, there’s a paper in tomorrow’s Science that calls for a Global Biodiversity Observing System, a snip at €200 million to €500 million. ((Scholes, R.J., Mace, G.M., Turner, W., Geller, G.N., Jurgens, N., Larigauderie, A., Muchoney, D., Walther, B.A., Mooney, H.A. (2008). ECOLOGY: Toward a Global Biodiversity Observing System. Science, 321(5892), 1044-1045. DOI: 10.1126/science.1162055))

In each of these pieces, people who are convinced that the loss of biodiversity is A Bad Thing and (some of them) that Something Ought to Be Done, lament the fact that so few people agree and either that they don’t know what should be done, or that they do, but nobody worth squat is listening.

We kind of know why. It’s the hoary old boiled frog myth. ((And yes, I know it’s a myth; the problem is nobody seems to care.)) The downside of biodiversity loss is so remote, in time and in space, and so diffuse, that most people really can’t rouse themselves even to think sensibly about it, let alone to act. We need a clear and present danger if we are to respond. Cary Fowler, the esteemed Executive Secretary of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, took this as his lesson in one of his recent reflections.

“[W]e will probably never have a “crop diversity crisis”, because of the lag time between cause and effect. Today’s oversights in caring for this resource provoke tomorrow’s emergencies, but at most we are hard-wired only to deal with the latter.”

Fowler, not surprisingly, is one of the few people I’ve cited who actually makes use of an argument based on agriculture and food. Success, he says, will come when “politicians … realize that positioning agricultural systems to provide food security in a climate changed world is the supreme benefit to be generated from crop diversity”.

As we lament so often, many of the people expressing concern about the loss of biodiversity don’t even recognize the value of diversity for and within agriculture. Among all the airy-fairy remote, distant and diffuse benefits of biodiversity, why do they ignore food?

We bang on about the need to preserve agricultural biodiversity in crops and wild relatives as insurance against disasters, but alas the disasters don’t seem to be happening, just yet. In vain I scan the headlines each day for news of a devastating outbreak of Asian soybean rust, or wheat rust UG99, or even good old potato blight, but they just refuse to happen. We know about past disasters, and we know how agricultural biodiversity helped to overcome them, but that’s ancient history. We’re much safer now.

A few of us cry wolf, and we are ignored, and we all know what happens to people who cry wolf too often. I sometimes wish I could summon some real demons to do some real damage to the food supply. Yes, a genuine crisis: but isn’t it the case that in chinese, the word for “crisis” is compounded from the words for “danger” and “opportunity”? ((No, it isn’t.))

Alas, a food crisis isn’t likely to help. At the risk of promoting yet another hoary old chinese myth, “well-fed people have many problems, hungry people have only one”. By the time politicians and policymakers are hungry (like that’s ever going to happen) protecting any kind of biodiversity will be the last thing on their minds.

In all seriousness, how do we get people — including conservationists — to understand that if they don’t conserve and make use of more agricultural biodiversity, they’re probably not going to be around to enjoy the benefits of conserving lots of wild biodiversity?

Ugandan fair offers farmers and politicians a chance to talk

There’s a fascinating article in yesterday’s Uganda Monitor about a trade show for the agricultural sector at Jinja. Fascinating for all sorts of reasons, one being the disconnect between what farmers want and what politicians think they want.

President Yoweri Museveni opened the show on July 22 and although his speech dwelt more on politics and complaints against FM stations, he was there to inspire farmers, and acknowledge that they contribute more to the GDP.

However, farmers wanted to hear that the President would reduce the interest rate on Bonna Bagagagawale (sic) funds to 1 percent. That rural roads would be fixed so that produce gets to the markets easily and that taxes on farm implements can be waived and that the government will set up tractor hire services in villages for farmers who cannot buy tractors to hire them.

Animal farmers wanted to hear that the government has banned export of unprocessed food so that by-products used to make animal feeds can be available.

I’m not saying that the farmers should get everything they want, but their demands certainly deserve consideration. Then there’s the question of why farmers want those things.

From Mbarara, Mr Moses Turyamanya learnt that matooke cost between Shs5,000 and Shs20,000 in urban areas. “We brought a lorry full of matooke and it sold out,” he said. “At our farms, we earn between Shs500 and Shs2,000, per bunch of matooke. Now we know that we have to market our produce to get better money.”

But the biggest discovery for Mr Turyamanya is when he learnt that matooke can be processed into food products.

He says a few years ago, Farm Africa exhibited solar driers which can dry matooke and other types of bananas.

“I secured a drier and now we are able to dry matooke and process it into powder, juice, chips and other products,” Mr Turyamanya said. “The government is planning to build a factory so that we can process food and sell to the World Food Programme.”

And there’s a lot more of interest, like a plea from Kabaka Ronald Mutebi for better demonstration farms (and, by extension, better extension services), a joint Uganda-Iran tractor company, and local seed companies. We know farmer field schools are a good thing; this kind of fair sounds like a giant farmer field school and may contain the seed of a politician field school too. If they listen.

But is it art?

While I bring a major rant on biodiversity and the media to the boil, here’s something that won’t be part of that mix. I’m sorry I missed it.

On Saturday, Aug. 16, at 3 p.m., the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park will host artist Leah Gauthier ((Leah Gauthier has an interesting web site, and is clearly into agricultural biodiversity as food and as art, so hats off to her and the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park.)) … The DeCordova Annual features Gauthier’s large installation entitled “Melon, 2008.” For this installation, Gauthier planted eight different types of heirloom melons on the Pollack Family Terrace. … This installation has grown throughout the exhibition, as the melons started as mere plantings and now have developed into mature fruit. In her Artist Talk and performance … Gauthier will harvest and prepare the melons with visitors. Taste is an essential element in this work, as is community building around food. By inviting viewers to have a unique and culinary experiences based on the richness of biodiversity, “Melon” will speak directly to the impoverishing influence of agricultural modernization. Gauthier’s work stems from the idea of social sculpture and the nourishing capacity of art as well as from a viewpoint of art as an action and not an object. … Gauthier’s work is … particularly interesting … because her installation is entirely organic. By placing agriculture in a specifically cultural context — the museum — Gauthier asks viewers to re-imagine the growing, harvesting, preparation, and consumption of food so that they may re-connect with some of humanity’s most fundamental activities.

And you know, it kinda sorta makes sense. You can try this sort of thing in a supermarket, and get quizzical looks. You can do it at a Farmers’ Market, but I suspect you would be preaching to the choir. Art lovers, though, could be a fertile audience. We’ve blogged about this sort of thing before — rice art and that bloke who used sorghum and wheat to mimic a housing development — mostly as an affectionate aside. But I wonder, maybe this really is the way to go to get the message across. After all, if a pickled shark can get everyone in a tizz, why not a frozen coconut?

Maybe I can get a Guggenheim to cultivate my garden? In any case, It’ll be fun to see how Gauthier’s Sharecropper thang works out.

Nibbles: Hemp, Galip, Fort Collins, Dwarf cows, Persephone, Atolls