Contact: Margie Bushman
Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
(805) 962-2571, margie@sbpermaculture.org
Santa
Barbara Permaculature Network
In Conjunction with-
Santa
Barbara City College Center for
Sustainability
Presents
Biodiversity Hotspots: A Conversation with Permaculturist
Gabriel Howearth
Noted Botanist and Co-founder of Seeds Of Change Seed
Company
Tuesday August 26, 2008, 7PM, $5
donation
Santa Barbara Main
Library, Faulkner Gallery, 40 East Anapamu
Street
Humans have been
more actively changing the earth's
ecosystems in the last 50 years than any
time in human history,
resulting in a huge loss of biological diversity.
Global hotspots
have been identified as the most biologically vulnerable
places on
the planet. Thirty-five of these most biolgically valuable
locations
from Peru, to Easter Island, Madagascar, New Zealand, Brazil and
the
United States have been highlighted by a team of scientists from the
organization of Conservation
International.
Knowing
humans have initiated this crisis, how can we step back from
a destructive
path and instead secure and create a sustainable future
for the Earth and
it's species? Can individuals play a part, help
change this course
even in Santa Barbara and our own backyards,
become our own protected
Biodiversity
Hotspot?
We are
pleased to offer an opportunity for an evening of sharing and
conversation
with Gabriel Howearth , co-founder of Seeds of Change,
the foremost GMO free
organic seed bank company in the world. Joining
him will be Dr. Adam Green,
assistant professor of Biology and
Director of the Santa Barbara City
College Center for Sustainability
( http://sustainability.sbcc.edu), and Dr. Robert
Bruegel, founder of
OlaBrisa Eco-village development (www.OlaBrisa.com ) in southern Baja
California.
Biodiversity is a term that implies more than tallying species. It
also
suggests multiplicity. Identifying endangered hotspots and
preserving the
environment in its native state are the best-known
aspects of biodiversity.
The practice of biodiversity encompasses
critical features in light of
humanity's apparent inability to slow
the rapid loss of wilderness, stop
global warming, or reverse the
greenhouse effect. It includes heritage seed
collection and seed
banking to ensure future diversity, the creation of
urban and
suburban ecological zones, establish new and more extensive
botanical
gardens, and planting oases of human-made
biodiversity.
Buena
Fortuna, the botanical gardens of Gabriel Howearth, are a case
study in the
creation of biodiversity. Located in the desert of
Southern Baja California,
Howearth tends more than 4,000 different
native and introduced plant species
that co-exist on nearly 10
acres. The entire Baja peninsula has only
approximately 2,700 plant
species. The 4,000-plus species under
Howearth's care make an
astounding vision that steadily expands as he adds
more
species.
Gabriel
Howearth is a Botanist, Landscape Architect and Seedsman. He
is the
founder of Buena Fortuna Botanical Garden, located in Baja
Mexico (3700
plant species of the tropical and dry tropical regions
of the world), and
president of Siempre Semillas AC, a Mexican NGO
whose main focus is to
preserve seed diversity by teaching and
planting. His center offers
educational workshops and apprenticeships
in Botany, Permaculture, Organic
Gardening and seed
harvesting. Currently he is working with several
ecological
organizations in Central and South America and travels worldwide
to
teach about Organic seeds and ways to preserve our genetic seed
purity locally in order to contribute to the global change in
positive
ways. He provided professional consultation for "Dreaming
New Mexico"
a strategy of food & energy self-sustainable for the
state by the year
2020; an ambitious and well supported project, an
initiative of Bioneers,
with the participation of a number of NGO's,
Farmers, Indigenous
Groups, Schools as well as Governmental support.
*** Youtube Trailer for
the Documentary Feature Film "HOTSPOTS"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=KY08NIXvrxc , produced by
Conservation
International.
The
evening lecture takes place at the Santa Barbara City Public
Downtown
Library Faulkner Galley 40 E Anapumu St, Tuesday Aug 26,
12, 7-9pm,
for a donation of $5. No reservations are required.
Santa
Barbara Permaculture Network, Sponsors for the event are The
Santa
Barbara City College Center for Sustainability , Women's
Environmental
Watch (WE Watch), and OlaBrisa Eco Development Company
sponsor the
event. For more information, please call (805) 962-2571,
margie@sbpermaculture.org or www.sbpermaculture.org.
-end-
RESOURCES:
One
of the main findings of the the UN's Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Report
www.millenniumassessment.org/en/Index.aspx
2001-2005 . "Over the past 50 years, humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly
and extensively than in any comparable period of time in human history, largely
to meet rapidly growing demands for food, fresh water, timber, fiber and fuel.
This has resulted in a substantial and largely irreversible loss in the
diversity of life on Earth".
Terraforming in Southern Baja
California: Arid-Tropical Biodiversity, Regeneration, and
Preservation
HerbalGram. 2000;50:58-63 American Botanical
Council
http://content.herbalgram.org/wholefoodsmarket/herbalgram/articleview.asp?a=2288
by
James E. Williams, OMD
Creating an oasis of biodiversity in the imposing
desert of Southern Baja California, Mexico may well be the ultimate challenge
for any gardener. It may also be the key to survival. Biodiversity, a term that
has become a bit trendy lately, implies more than tallying species. It also
suggests multiplicity. Identifying endangered hotspots1 and preserving the
environment in its native state are the best-known aspects of biodiversity.
However, the practice of biodiversity encompasses other features of equal or,
perhaps, more critical importance in light of humanity's apparent inability to
slow the rapid loss of wilderness, to stop global warming, or reverse the
greenhouse effect. This practice includes heritage seed collection and seed
banking to ensure future diversity, the creation of urban and suburban
ecological zones, establishing new and more extensive botanical gardens, and
planting oases of human-made biodiversity.
Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
an educational
non-profit since 2000
(805)
962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA
93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
www.sbpermaculture.org
"We are like trees, we must create new leaves, in new
directions, in order to grow." - Anonymous