Davis, California
June 23, 2004
Peruvian peasants, Italian
consumers and California peach farmers are all helping to
promote crop diversity in unexpected ways, says a
UC Davis anthropologist who
studies agriculture.
In his new book, "Farmers' Bounty: Locating Crop Diversity in
the Contemporary World," Stephen Brush investigates areas
that are bucking the trend toward fewer agricultural varieties
in modern agriculture.
He concludes that, worldwide, a variety of farming and consumer
practices are maintaining much more diverse foods than has been
assumed.
In Italy's case, an ancient wheat grain, farro, which takes more
time and effort to hull than more modern versions, has
experienced a renaissance after surviving in isolated pockets of
the country, Brush says.
"Foods prepared with farro have become fashionable because the
grain is organically produced and is associated with a
traditional Mediterranean diet," Brush says in his book.
Moreover, the grain has been promoted as part of local identity
and its regional cuisine.
In California, peach varieties have increased over the past
century so that now more than 200 varieties are grown
commercially.
Brush says farmers are driven to diversify their crops by
lengthening the harvest period to take advantage of
"dramatically higher prices at the beginning and end of the
harvest season" and to avoid bottlenecks in labor and equipment.
Native farmers throughout the world are also credited with
preserving crop diversity, despite more efficient hybrids since
the Green Revolution of the 1960s. Brush, who has studied the
practices of farmers in Peru, Mexico and Turkey, says while the
agriculturalists have been open to the new varieties of
potatoes, corn and wheat, they continue to conserve their
traditional varieties as a back-up measure. |