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Traditional Food Crops Provide Community Resilience in Face of Climate Change

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borderjumpers Donating Member (74 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-09-10 11:34 AM
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Traditional Food Crops Provide Community Resilience in Face of Climate Change
Thanks to Dr. Soul Shava, Training Manager at the Aurecon Training Academy, in Pretoria, South Africa for sharing a recent http://krasny.dnr.cornell.edu/doc/Shava_et_al_2009.pdf">study, by researchers from http://www.ru.ac.za/">Rhodes and http://www.cornell.edu/">Cornell Universities and the http://www.blackrhino.org/nabout_sbrt.htm">Sebakwe Black Rhino Conservation Trust, on indigenous crops with the Nourishing the Planet project. We encourage everyone to continue to send in suggestions for examples of, and writing about, environmentally sustainable agriculture innovations to [email protected]. Your input is helping to shape our research! Written by Ronit Ridberg and cross posted from http://blogs.worldwatch.org/nourishingtheplanet/traditional-food-crops-provide-community-resilience-in-face-of-climate-change/">Nourishing the Planet.


A recent http://krasny.dnr.cornell.edu/doc/Shava_et_al_2009.pdf">study by researchers from http://www.ru.ac.za/">Rhodes and http://www.cornell.edu/">Cornell Universities and the http://www.blackrhino.org/nabout_sbrt.htm">Sebakwe Black Rhino Conservation Trust found that traditional food crops, such as mubovora (pumpkin) and ipwa (sweet reed), are an important source of community resilience in Zimbabwe—including resilience to climate change and economic turbulence.

Unlike traditional crops, the majority of commercial crops that have been introduced to the region “are not adapted to local conditions and require high inputs of agrochemical inputs such as fertilizers, mechanization, and water supply,” according to the study. These crops tend to be more vulnerable to climatic changes, such as the drought and subsequent flooding that occurred in Zimbabwe’s Sebakwe area in 2007–08.

To avoid some of these challenges, many communities and farmers turned—and returned—to growing traditional and indigenous crops. By incorporating indigenous vegetables and increasing crop diversity, farmers improved their diets and increased agricultural resilience to pest, diseases, and changes in weather. Planting different varieties of maize and millet also enabled farmers to match specific crops to their own microclimates.

Additional benefits of growing more diverse crops include seed saving and the processing of traditional foods. With dried and other preserved traditional foods, communities have a more secure and reliable food source during the off-seasons. And seed saving and sharing enable communities to remain independent from commercial agricultural companies, helping to ensure future food security.

For more on the benefits of growing indigenous vegetables as crops, see http://blogs.worldwatch.org/innovation-of-the-week-homegrown-solutions-to-alleviating-hunger-and-poverty">Innovation of the Week: Homegrown Solutions to Alleviating Hunger and Poverty, http://blogs.worldwatch.org/keeping-weeds-for-nutrition-and-taste">Keeping Weeds for Nutrition and Taste, and http://blogs.worldwatch.org/creating-a-well-rounded-food-revolution">Creating a Well-Rounded Food Revolution.

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1. Comment on our daily posts-we check comments everyday and look forward to a regular ongoing discussion with you.
2. Receive weekly updates-Sign up for our "Nourishing the Planet" weekly newsletter at the blog by clicking http://blogs.worldwatch.org/nourishingtheplanet/">here and receive regular blog and travel updates.
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RaleighNCDUer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-09-10 11:39 AM
Response to Original message
1. Everything that Monsanto hates -
indigenous crops, seed saving, plant diversity.

More power to them.

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