Agricultural biodiversity
Banking against Doomsday
Gene banks represent an overdue push to preserve crop biodiversity. It
also needs conserving on farms
Mar 10th 2012 | LONGYEARBYEN | from the print edition
http://www.economist.com/node/21549931
WITH a heavy clunk, the steel outer doors of the Svalbard Global Seed
Vault closed on February 28th, shutting out a howling Arctic gale and
entombing a tonne of new arrivals: 25,000 seed samples from America,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Tajikistan, Armenia and Syria. For Cary Fowler,
the vault’s American architect, the Syrian chickpeas and fava beans
were especially welcome.
Opened in 2008, the Svalbard vault is a backup for the world’s 1,750
seed banks, storehouses of agricultural biodiversity. To illustrate the
need for it, the Philippines’ national seed bank was destroyed by fire
in January, six years after it was damaged by flooding. Those of
Afghanistan and Iraq were destroyed in recent wars. Should the conflict
in Syria reach that country’s richest store, in Aleppo, the damage
would now be less. Some 110,000 Syrian seed samples are now in the
Svalbard vault, out of around 750,000 samples in all. “When I see
this,” says Mr Fowler, looking lovingly at his latest consignment, “I
just think, ‘thank goodness, they’re safe.’”
The Svalbard vault is protected by two airlocks, at the end of a tunnel
sunk 160 metres into the permafrost of Norway’s Arctic archipelago,
outside the village of Longyearbyen, one of the world’s most northerly
habitations. It is maintained at a constant temperature of -18°C. This
is serious disaster preparedness: if its electricity were cut, Mr
Fowler reckons the vault would take two centuries to warm to freezing
point. He also enthusiastically points to its concave tunnel-head,
designed to deflect the force of a missile strike. Such precautions
have spawned the facility’s nickname: the Doomsday Vault.
Mr Fowler, who manages it on behalf of Norway’s government, an
association of Nordic gene banks and an international body, the Global
Crop Diversity Trust, reckons the vault contains samples of around
two-thirds of the world’s stored crop biodiversity. To augment this, he
will also soon embark on a project, funded with $50m from Norway, to
collect the seeds of many crops’ wild ancestors.
A seedy business
Most seed banks were created in the 1970s and 1980s, towards the end of
a global surge in crop yields, wrought largely through the adoption of
hybridised seed varieties, known as the Green Revolution. The idea was
born of a realisation that a vast amount of agricultural biodiversity
was being lost, as farmers abandoned old seeds, often locally developed
over centuries, for the new hybrids.
The extent of the loss, which continues today, is poorly documented.
The extinction of non-human species is generally better studied than
the loss of the genetic material that sustains humanity. Yet, largely
on the basis of named crop varieties that are no longer extant, the
UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that 75% of crop
biodiversity has been lost from the world’s fields. India is reckoned
to have had over 100,000 varieties of rice a century ago; it now has
only a few thousand. America once had around 5,000 apple varieties, and
now has a few hundred. Such measures probably underestimate the scale
of the losses, because a single traditional seed variety often contains
a lot of genetic diversity.
It is hard to quantify how much this matters; but the long-term risks
are potentially huge. Agricultural biodiversity is the best hedge
against future blights, including pests, diseases and climate change.
That is why plant breeders, from poor smallholders to the world’s
biggest biotech firms, masters of the genetically modified organism
(GMO), continuously update their genetic stock, often from obscure
sources.
“If we ignore genetic diversity while we develop GMO products, we risk
a disease or pest emerging that will wipe those types out,” says John
Soper, head of crop genetics research at Pioneer Hi-Bred, the seed
division of DuPont, a chemicals giant. He says the firm has drawn
genetic material from its stock of wild American sunflower seeds three
or four times in the past decade, in a bid to make its commercial
varieties resistant to broomrape, a parasitic blight of southern
Europe. It also has plans to cope with climate change, having recently
opened a research outfit in chilly western Canada. It is trying to
develop local varieties of maize (corn) and soyabean, which are not
grown there commercially, but may be as the temperature climbs.
Yet biotech firms cannot be relied upon to look
after crop biodiversity. Their gene banks are too small and too
concentrated on a handful of commercial crops. Their urge to make
profits is not necessarily aligned with the wider cause of feeding
mankind. Hence a recent push to boost national gene banks, of which the
Svalbard vault is a product.
It is a heartening display of international co-operation. In the
vault’s frozen sanctum, North Korean seeds, in neat brown wooden boxes,
sit alongside stocks from South Korea—and from Congo, Bangladesh and
Peru. In many such developing countries, gene banks are impoverished
and badly managed, which is another threat to their stocks. Pondering
one of the risks, Mr Fowler warns “a millennium of agricultural
activity can disappear one night in a bowl of porridge.”
Yet seed banks are not the only answer to saving
crop biodiversity: it also needs conserving in fields. This is because
seed banks rarely store varieties of crop that do not produce seeds,
including cassava, bananas and many other fruits and berries. They also
rarely record local knowledge of their deposits, which can be almost as
important as the seeds themselves. Unlike seed banks, moreover, nature
is anything but ossified: it is gloriously adaptable. Over the past 15
years in West Africa, for example, populations of traditional sorghum
varieties have been observed shortening their growth cycle by two weeks
in response to a curtailed rainy season. The best way to harness this
adaptability is simply to let nature get on with it.
Farmers’ eagerness to jettison their wily old landraces is
understandable. Improved varieties of seed are estimated to have
boosted yields by 21-43%, independently of fertilisers and other
inputs. To conserve crop biodiversity amid the inevitable rush for
hybrids, seed banks have an important role. But another solution—as to
many climate-related problems—is to make drastic improvements in
land-use planning, and then encourage strategically placed farmers to
dedicate a small area to traditional crops. Ways of doing this include
developing niche markets for their endearingly old-school vegetables
and grains or even, as in Nepal, with the national equivalent of a
harvest festival. Its government regularly dishes out prizes to those
farmers with the most biodiverse land.
Such measures are less glamorous and more troublesome than depositing
seeds in an Arctic bunker kindly paid for by Norwegian taxpayers. That
is why they are too rarely taken, which is a great shame. If the world
did a better job of tending crop biodiversity in its fields, the feared
Doomsday after which the vault is nicknamed would be even less likely
to come.