Brainfood: Carpathian landuse, Yield & biodiversity, Cajanus @ICRISAT, Wheat meddling, Grape acne, Safflower diversity, Mangosteen origins, Agroforestry and SDGs, Brazilian Gir

Globalized diets paper globalizes

photo (10)You may, unless of course you’ve been visiting Mars, have come across in the past couple of weeks coverage of Colin Khoury’s (along with co-authors) paper on “Increasing homogeneity in global food supplies and the implications for food security.” That’s Colin to the left in his office at CIAT, when I visited him last week. The paper has really caught the imagination of the media, and is now one of PNAS’s most attention-grabbing articles ever, in the top 5% of all articles in fact. One of the better write-ups was in NPR, but there’s lots, lots more, in multiple languages. Including a brief mention by World Bank VP Rachel Kyte and CGIAR Fund Council Chair at a Wageningen University event. But where did the idea for the study come from? Well, we are not prone to boasting here at the Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog, but please forgive us on this occasion if we point out that it is a post by Colin in these very pages about four years ago that marks the beginning of his journey to superstardom. From little acorns…

And let us not forget that we can do something about these trends.

Brainfood: Intercropping, Biodiversity loss, Fisheries evolution, Pigeonpea diversity, Upland framing, Alpine agroforestry, Italian core tomatoes, Madagascar adaptation

Ask Luigi anything

Oh my. Quest Science is digging into Svalbard. I wonder what they’ll turn up.

Did you know there is a state-of-the-art seed vault buried deep inside a mountain on a remote island near the North Pole? Now is your chance to ask a scientist more about this initiative to safeguard the future of the world’s crop diversity. Post your questions in the comments below or send a tweet to @QUESTScience with the hashtag #QUESTseedvault.

QUEST’s television host, Simran Sethi, will do a Google+ Hangout with Luigi Guarino, Senior Scientist with Global Crop Diversity Trust, in early April. We look forward to including some of your questions in the conversation!

Featured: Aid

Ed Carr explains my over-compressed Nibble about his recent post on aid and development:

I was arguing more about how we think about adaptation, and who is doing the adapting. Obviously adaptations will have to occur in some systems, but I am concerned that development donors and implementers too often assume that all such adaptations will have to come from outside the communities and countries in which they are needed. And this is a problem related to how we see those in the Global South – a persistent narrative of poor and helpless that causes us to overlook their capabilities, and to overestimate our own…

Indeed.