- Bumper wheat crop forecast. Norman Borlaug comments: “looming catastrophe”.
- Sunflower may have been domesticated independently in Mexico, as well as in the Eastern US.
- Neglected and novel? A cautionary tale about The Miracle Berry from the BBC. Via.
- Hold the phone! World Bank says countries are not going to meet the Millennium Development Goals. Via.
Nibbles: Hotspots, tea, silk, photos, food prices, basil, AGRA, rice, Denmark, SADC
- Economist blogger tells conservationists to stop with the hotspot mapping already, and conserve something. DIVA-GIS developers unavailable for comment.
- Some of the tea in China.
- Filipinos abandon cannabis for silk. Jeremy comments: you can smoke silk?
- Nice tree photos.
- FT does the interactive thing with rising food prices. Via. Let them eat pasta, I say.
- Wanted: more mid-sized farms to fight The Man.
- Watch out world. Mississippi set to industrialise basil production.
- Ten reasons AGRA won’t work.
- A tale of two rice-growers; how the crop has fared in Brazil and China.
- Danes meet to save seeds.
- Southern Africans meet to save seeds.
The next big thing
Forget those silly pocket pigs. Who needs their smooth, anodyne winsomeness. What you want is a hybrid hedgehog. And the Time Team has a great idea for what to do with the little beggars.
Development one cell at a time
We’ve blogged a few times about how mobile phones bring farmers and fisherfolk closer to the market, and how this can work for agrobiodiversity. But of course agriculture is not the only field which can benefit; people all over the developing world have realized this, and manufacturers have in turn noticed that, and are trying to cash in. There’s an article in the NY Times Magazine about an anthropologist hired by Nokia to help them design the kind of phones that poor people need — and could help lift them out of poverty. Jan Chipchase is his name and if the article piques your interest you can see him give a TED talk. He also has a blog that’s great fun, and which occasionally even refers to food and agricultural biodiodiversity.
Making work pay
A heart-warming story of an unemployed (unemployable?) graduate in Malaysia who took up farming and is now making a good living. Azizi Ali started out with pisang berangan, a local banana variety, but also grows papayas and water melons, lemon grass, galangal, ginger and turmeric.