Science a Gogo 02-20-07 Can Biodiverse Farming Feed The World?

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Science a Gogo
02-20-07
Can Biodiverse Farming Feed The World?
Agriculture is rapidly approaching a time of massive change, says an article in
Agronomy Journal. Impacted by the end of cheap energy, depleted water
resources, impaired ecosystem services and unstable climates, agricultural
industries will have to find new ways to feed a world whose appetite for food
crops will grow by around 75 percent over the next 50 years. Article author, Fred
Kirschenmann, of Iowa State University, believes that biodiverse farming may
provide the answers.
Biodiverse farming exploits the biological synergies inherent in multi-species
systems; a methodology far removed from today's monocultural, energy intensive
industrial agriculture systems that are based on specialization, simplification,
therapeutic intervention and cheap energy.
Kirschenmann cites examples where farmers have already established
successful, complex farming systems based on biological synergies and adaptive
management. One is Takao Furuno's duck/fish/rice/fruit farm in Japan. He
produces duck meat, duck eggs, fish meat, fruit, and rice without any purchased
outside inputs, using a highly synergistic system of production on the same
acreage where he previously only produced rice. Astonishingly, in this new
system, his rice yields have increased up to 50 percent over previous yields from
an energy-intensive rice monoculture.
Likewise, Joel Salatin, of Polyface Farms near Swoope, VA, has developed a
rotational grazing production system featuring pastures containing at least 40
varieties of plants and numerous animal species. Salatin's farm uses little fossil
fuel, yet the farm is highly productive. The 57-hectare farm annually produces
30,000 dozen eggs, 10,000 to 12,000 broilers, 100 beef animals, 250 hogs, 800
turkeys and 600 rabbits.
Kirschenmann believes that climate change will play a big role in determining the
farming methods of the future. Volatile weather conditions will make it difficult to
sustain highly specialized monoculture cropping systems which require relatively
stable climates. Farmers likely will need to adjust quickly, he says, adopting
methods that are more resilient in the face of unstable climates, and that begin to
out-produce monocultures by virtue of their multi-species output.
He cites another study which showed that diverse, synergistic farms can be
profitable and simultaneously benefit the environment. The study demonstrated
that when farms are converted from corn/soybean monocultures to more diverse
operations, net farm income can increase by as much as 108 percent, while
generating significant environmental and social benefits. The key principles of
biodiverse farming, according to Kirschenmann, are:
* Be energy conserving
* Feature both biological and genetic diversity
* Be largely self-regulating and self-renewing
* Be knowledge intensive
* Operate on biological synergies
* Employ adaptive management
* Feature ecological restoration rather than choosing between extraction and
preservation
* Achieve optimum productivity by featuring nutrient-density, and multi-product
synergistic production on limited acreage
Read the whole article at
http://agron.scijournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/99/2/373
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