Organic practitioners meet, and meet again

The European Consortium for Organic Plant Breeding (ECO-PB) has announced two up-coming meetings. One is dedicated to the European organic seed regime and the other one is a celebration of ECO-PB’s 10 year anniversary.

That’s what we said a couple of days ago. And it’s all still true and everything. I just bring it up again because we have heard from our reader Matthew about an Organic Seed Growers Conference on January 19-21, 2012, in Port Townsend, WA.

The Organic Seed Growers Conference is recognized as the only event of its kind in North America, bringing together hundreds of farmers, seed production and distribution companies, researchers, plant breeders, pathologists, and university extension in two days of informative presentations, panel discussions, and networking events. There are also farm visits and short courses prior to the two-day conference.

Sounds like fun. As ever, we’d love to hear from any participants.

Feria del Elote

Untitled by CIMMYT
Untitled, a photo by CIMMYT on Flickr.

From CIMMYT’s Flickr feed:

Carts selling tacos made with maize tortillas (traditional Mexican flatbreads) in Jala, Nayarit, on the Pacific coast of Mexico, during the town’s annual two-week Feria del Elote, or maize ear festival. Tortillas are a staple food in Mexico, and are commonly filled to make tacos. For more about maize in Jala, see CIMMYT’s August 2007 e-news story “Pride and pragmatism sustain a giant Mexican maize,” available online.

Photo credit: Eloise Phipps/CIMMYT.

Maize hits the heights

The llama dung story got me thinking about high-altitude maize. Maize is a tropical plant and it would have taken quite a bit of effort to get it adapted to high elevations. This is what Genesys knows about maize around the world:

And this is (in red) where maize collected above 3,500 masl has been collected:

Those Andean agriculturalists obviously did a pretty good job of breeding maize to fit the new environment, and in fact still are.

LATER: As Jacob helpfully points out in a comment on this post, a 2002 paper confirmed, using microsatellites, that Andean maize is genetically quite distinct.

German lentils go back home

Before the introduction of the potato, Irish people included grain as a dietary mainstay, particularly oats. Oats were used in breads, desserts, drinks, medicines and cosmetics! Other grains that were grown included barley, flax, rye and some wheats. Unfortunately, many of these grain varieties were lost and we had to turn, primarily to the Vavilov Institute in Russia, the first genebank in the world, to repatriate our native grains. Michael Miklis in Piltown, Kilkenny, working with very small quantities of grain, over many years trialed them and bulked them up so that they could be resown on field scale again.

That reference to the Vavilov Institute on the Irish Seed Savers website reminded me of something similar they told me about the last time I was there.

Dr Margarita Vishnyaova, the head of the legume department, told me that they had recently “repatriated” some “German” lentils to a farmer cooperative in Baden-Wuerttemberg. The varieties in question are labelled “Späts Alpenlinse” (K2106, collected Hungary in 1965) and “Späths Albinse” (K2076, collected Czechoslovakia in 1963) in VIR’s records. Woldemar Mammel, a farmer from near Stuttgart had apparently been looking for these varieties in databases all over the place and eventually happened on them in the VIR online catalogue. They are old traditional varieties from the Swabian Alps which are no longer grown in Germany, or at least his part of them. The handover of the seed to Herr Mammel and a group of 15 other German organic farmers took place in Nov. 2007 at VIR, and was filmed by Slow Food Deutschland (Prof. Dr Roman Lenz, Dinah Epperlein). There are some photographs of the event on the Slow Food website. Sometimes genebank databases are good for something after all.

More on that llama dung story

Our friend Alex Chepstow-Lusty, not content with the phenomenal exposure his work on llama dung is already receiving, has kindly agreed to write a small piece for us too, ruminating on his findings. Thanks, Alex! For the photos too. BTW, that’s Alex down there with the laptop and the mite.

Llamas become important in the record from about 3500 years ago (the evidence comes from counting the mites eating their broken down excrement), and they are an integral part of the rural economy because besides wool and meat, their excrement was vital to providing fertilizer for the fields, as well as dried for providing fuel for heating or cooking in the mountains where there were very few trees. The fact that they defecate together makes it much easier for people to collect it, as for example in the pasture right next to the little lake of Marcacocha. But fertilizer in combination with the crops quinoa and potatoes and their wild relatives was not enough to drive a massive human population explosion. However, maize introduced 2700 years ago in the Andes provides lots of calories and a brief warming allowed it to be grown at high altitude (maybe a new form had been suddenly developed?) and it is very transportable and easily stored. It was at this time 2700 years ago (or 700 BC) that llamas would have also been used for transporting goods, and an indirect benefit of that with all the caravans would have been the excrement they produced, but elsewhere herds not used in transport would also have supplied excrement.

With the introduction of maize, this is when people take the full leap to an agricultural society, instead of also relying on many wild plant resources and start weeding on a big scale as fields are developed. From this time onwards, numerous varieties of maize were developed in the Andes-making it one of the most important centres of maize diversity in the world.

I think using animal manure has been always a widespread practice (probably with human excrement) to provide fertilizers in the Andes and elsewhere. In the Andes, at 700 BC the full shift to agriculture with maize is so much later than the Fertile Crescent where this process, the combination of cereals and animals domesticated (and hence availability of animal fertilizers) allowed civilizations to take off 10,000 years ago.

Maize and muck were the essential ingredients to drive the expansion of the Inca Empire (AD 1400-1533), which also coincided with a period of warming that began from AD 1100, allowing cultivation of much larger areas at higher altitude for maize-fertilized by llama excrement, but also probably human excrement. The Incas were the masters of relandscaping the landscape with irrigated terraces. They also had store houses particularly full of maize across the Empire from what is today the Colombian border to the middle of Chile, which the Spanish described as able to support the Empire for another ten years when they arrived-which could easily support a large army. These supplies would have been transported by llama herds as well as by human porters. Hence, without maize and muck, there would not have been the people freed up and fed to form a huge army and build such monuments as Machu Picchu. Quinoa and potatoes are still important elements of the diet, but maize could support an Empire, and also provided a ritualistic drink, chicha, still very important in the cultural life of the Andes.

And here’s an interesting comment on potato vs maize from Graham
Thiele of CIP, made in an exchange of emails with Alex which he has kindly shared with us.

Productivity in farmers fields is only part of the story. Potatoes are perishable and bulky per unit of energy. Nowadays they are generally considered as non-traded commodities by economists because they are generally produced and consumed relatively locally and don’t cross international borders to anywhere near the same extent as cereals. This would have been even more true in the pre colonial period where everything had to be carried on peoples backs or by llama. So maize has a huge advantage as an energy dense storable food for extracting surplus from any type of political system which is more than very local. So potatoes and other roots and tubers would most likely have been produced and consume locally whilst maize could be traded, moved and stored over a much longer distance. So it was perhaps the transportability of maize which mattered more than its productivity. Potato can be made more energy dense and storable by turning it into chunio, but this has an additional cost, leads to nutritional losses and needs high altitude processing areas with regular frosts. I guess this might have happened in the Aymara kingdoms.