April 17, 2008
Source:
Sci.DevNet
by M. P. Jones, Executive
Director of the Forum for
Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA), Ghana
Thousands of traditional crop species could help break
dependence on a few global food crops, and offer valuable
environmental services, says Monty Jones
Only 150 crop species are grown commercially on a global scale,
with wheat and maize alone providing over half of the world's
protein and calorie needs. Another 7,000 species play crucial
roles in poor people's livelihoods but are otherwise
underutilised.
These underutilised species have important traditional uses for
food, fibre, fodder, vegetable oil and medicines. But they also
have unexploited commercial potential and, if used more widely,
could provide important environmental services.
They could be developed to improve food security, alleviate
poverty, improve nutrition, raise incomes, and sustain critical
and fragile ecosystems.
Growing them commercially could make a vital contribution to
halting and indeed reversing the loss of biodiversity in farming
systems — which will be the inevitable result of continued
reliance on a narrow portfolio of crops.
Irreplaceable resources
A variety of factors work against maintaining agricultural
biodiversity. But among the most important is a lack of
knowledge and awareness of agricultural diversity's intrinsic
value to society, and its potential for development. Sustainable
agricultural systems depend on a diversity of species to
withstand attacks — from present and future diseases, pests,
climate and other environmental changes — as well as
unpredictable social, economic and market demands.
This lack of awareness means inadequate attention and
insufficient investment has been given to conserving
biodiversity by actually using it. And this is contributing to
the loss of irreplaceable genetic resources that are endemic to
Africa. The seriousness of this situation has spurred the Forum
for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA, an umbrella
organisation for organisations engaged in agricultural research
and development in Africa) to support Bioversity International's
Agricultural Biodiversity Initiative for Africa.
The initiative aims to conserve and sustainably use agricultural
biodiversity by galvanising countries and institutions to work
together on the problem and give it greater importance. This
will be pursued in the preparations for the Conference of
Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in Bonn,
Germany, in May 2008.
Future food and environmental security must not be sacrificed
for short-term financial gains. Protecting against this requires
a concerted and holistic approach. For example, gene banks need
to be responsive to both the farming and the scientific
communities. They also need support from policies that attract
scientists to work on underutilised crops and encourage farmers
to commercialise them.
Reviving a rice cultivar
The revival of the African rice cultivar Oryza glaberrima is a
good example of the potential benefits to be derived from making
better use of non-commercial crops.
In the 1990s, researchers at
WARDA (the African rice centre) began to screen their
holdings of African rice cultivars. They had discovered that O.
glaberrima had a number of agronomic properties that are valued
by farmers who have limited access to agricultural inputs. Yet
O. glaberrima was underutilised and endangered. This influenced
the decision to hybridise O. glaberrima with Asian rice O.
sativa. The aim was to capture the high yields of O. sativa but
reduce unwanted characteristics like lodging and shattering
while gaining the high stress-resistance of African glaberrima.
The successful hybrids were released as
NERICA (new rices for Africa) types.
Today, the NERICAs are being widely adopted by Africa's rice
farmers. They are opening new opportunities for sustainable
agricultural development, especially in rainfed environments.
Heeding calls to action
Rwandan President Paul Kagame signalled another potentially
crucial shift in approach when he called for conservation to be
seen not only as a government responsibility, but also as a
business opportunity for both mainstream enterprises and small
business.
Speaking at the First International Research Conference on
Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Natural Resource
Management in Kigali in 2007, he also made it clear that the
only sustainable way of guaranteeing the success of a
biodiversity agenda — and indeed of conserving any natural
resources — is to ensure that policy actions lead to
socioeconomic transformation and improved livelihoods.
FARA is following up President Kagame's comments. The
organisation is making biodiversity conservation central to its
efforts to help achieve the Millennium Development Goals of
eliminating hunger and poverty by using natural resources
sustainably.
Africa is fortunate to have a wealth of underutilised species.
They can help achieve these goals. But it will not happen by
chance. FARA is
committed to raising awareness and improving understanding of
what needs to be done to use and conserve Africa's diverse crop
species.
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Oryza glaberrima and oryza
sativa are examples of the
benefits of making better use of
non-commercial crops
Flickr/ilmungo |
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