|

In
the Andes, farming communities use about 3 000 different
varieties of potatoes and in Java, farmers may plant
more than 600 species in a single home garden. This
enormous diversity can help to ensure an adequate and
stable supply of food as well as enhancing its
nutritional quality. It can also protect against the
decimation of an entire food crop by pests, disease, or
climate conditions.
|
International Plant Genetic resources
Institute
Via dei Tre Denari, 472/a
00057 Maccarese
(Fiumicino)
Rome, Italy
Tel: (+39) 0661181
Fax: (+39) 0661979661
Email: ipgri@cgiar.org
www.ipgri.cgiar.org

www.futureharvest.org
IPGRI is
a Future Harvest Centre supported by the Consultative Group on
International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
|
Plant genetic resources for food
security
World agriculture has been spectacularly
successful this century in meeting the demand for more food. But
with the increase in population not expected to level out until the
9 billion mark is reached, a huge challenge faces us. FAO estimates
that food production must increase by more than 75% in the next 50
years. At the same time, urbanization and changing lifestyles will
intensify demand for a more diverse range of food products.
Agricultural production will need to increase at a rate never
previously attained.
To meet the need for more food, it will be necessary to make better
use of a broader range of the world’s plant genetic diversity.
Increasing the productivity of crops will strengthen food security.
To do this, farmers will require new crop varieties capable of
producing under diverse conditions, without ever-increasing amounts
of fertilizers and other agrochemicals. Because of the limited scope
for growth in the world’s cultivated area, each new generation of
cultivated varieties will have to be more productive than its
predecessors.
Using diversity
Food insecurity -- both now and in the future -- is not
limited to developing countries; according to the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO)'s 1999 Report on the State of Food
Insecurity in the World, 8 million people in industrialized
countries and 26 million in countries in transition are
undernourished. However, the close link between poverty and hunger
means that developing countries are exceedingly hard hit. Today,
according to the most recent figures released by the FAO nearly 800
million people in the developing world do not have enough to eat. At
the 1996 World Food Summit, the world's leaders pledged to reduce
this number by half by the year 2015. At our current rate of
progress, there is no way of meeting that goal.
Genetic diversity gives species the ability to adapt to changing
environments, including new pests and diseases and new climatic
conditions. Plant genetic resources - the component of genetic
diversity of actual or potential use to humanity - provide the raw
material for breeding new varieties of crops. These, in turn,
provide a basis for more productive and resilient production systems
that are better able to cope with such stresses as drought or
overgrazing and that can reduce the potential for soil erosion. The
use of genetic diversity to produce stronger, more productive crops
-- on-farm, through field experimentation or in sophisticated gene
transfer procedures in the lab -- remains arguably the best route to
securing our food security and that of our children.
Farmers can improve their ability to meet their food needs by
growing a diversity of crop varieties. Different varieties may have
different tastes, may ripen at different times or have different
cooking qualities. Some grow well in sandy soils while others may
need a great deal of water. Importantly, the genetic diversity
contained in different varieties provides farmers and professional
plant breeders with options to develop, through selection and
breeding, new and more productive crops, crops that are resistant to
pests and diseases. The result may be a vast diversity of crop
varieties grown by farmers in any one area.
Perhaps the most powerful argument for maintaining diversity in
agricultural production systems is to guard against the instability
that can result from its absence. The Irish potato famine, in which
perhaps 1.5 million people died and another 1.5 million emigrated,
is probably the most famous and poignant example of a disaster that
can result from too heavy a reliance on a limited number of crops
and crop varieties.
The value of diversity goes well beyond its ability to support
stable production systems in marginal environments. The world's
population is still growing by an estimated 80 million people a
year. This growth will bring with it a tremendous increase in food
requirements.
Yet genetic resources are disappearing at unprecedented rates. More
than 15 million hectares of tropical forest are lost each year, and
experts estimate that as much as 8% of plant species could disappear
in the next 25 years. Over the past 50 years, new uniform crop
varieties have replaced many thousands of local varieties over huge
areas of production. Such reductions have serious implications for
food security over the long term.
Plant genetic resources are vital in meeting the food challenges we
face today and tomorrow. The wise use and management of genetic
diversity is perhaps one of the best ways to guarantee our ability
to use agriculture to continue, sustain, and hopefully to improve,
our lives and those of our children.
|