[Ccpg] Polycultures in the Brazilian drylands: A new version of an old tradition by Marsha Hanzi
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Sat Feb 14 06:50:44 PST 2004
hi everyone
Recently we had a visit in our region by Marsha Hanzi Permaculture
Teacher and Activist from Brazil , below is an article by her about her
work in Brazil, we will post more later about how we can help and when her
center will be open to interns and courses in the future, also working on
an interview for Permaculture Talkstory in Hopedance Magazine and Santa
Barbara Permaculture website too
wes
ALN No. 48: Hanzi: Polycultures in the Brazilian drylands
... Author information. (Back to top) Marsha Hanzi is the founder of the
Bahian Permaculture Institute. She works with a multi-disciplinary ...
ag.arizona.edu/OALS/ALN/aln48/hanzi.html - 18k - Cached - Similar pages
Polycultures in the Brazilian drylands: A new version of an old tradition
by Marsha Hanzi
"[The polyculture model tested in]this project is financed by the local
castor bean industry, which was interested in having a steadier supply of
raw materials. These first demonstration fields have given spectacular
results: one farmer harvested the equivalent of 1,400 Reais (about 700
dollars) from one hectare alone. This is about double the regional average
income per hectare..."
The drylands of Brazil
The Drylands Polyculture Project
Author information
Additional web resources
The drylands of Brazil
(Back to top)
Although Brazil is best known for its vast rainforests, it is also home to
an immense semi-arid region (900,000 square kilometers and growing!).
Located in the Northeast of the country, this region, the Sertão, is
composed of hundreds of micro-climates and specific ecosystems, rich in
fauna and flora. It is also densely populated (10 million inhabitants) and
highly degraded. The landholdings are a mixture of many smallholdings (5-30
hectares) and large cattle ranches, often owned by absentee owners. The
local people are a mixture of original indigenous inhabitants with
Portuguese, with a strong oral tradition that many were actually Jewish
refugees fleeing from the Inquisition (hiding their identity by changing
their names). Although the Indian tradition is virtually extinct in the
region, the form of agriculture practiced until today by many smallholders
is the traditional (and extremely destructive) slash-and-burn.
A recent survey estimated that 40% of this region is degraded with 25% in
danger of desertification, but this estimate is based on meager evidence,
at best. The fact is that with the arrival of "modern" farming and
cattle-raising, this region has suffered intensive removal of the native
vegetation, called Caatinga, exposing the shallow and fragile soils to hot
constant winds and sheet erosion. The traditional farmers planted small
(half-hectare) plots in the heart of the native vegetation, thus
maintaining biodiversity and natural windbreaks. When the short rainy
season was over, the rest of the year was spent hunting the local fauna.
With the advent of tractors, however, these plots grew to 2-3 hectares or
more, exposing the land, and virtually eliminating the Caatinga. With the
arrival of commercial farming, some 20 years ago, when many farmers began
to plant for money instead of for subsistence, the bank credit system
demanded that these plots be planted with monocultures and maintained with
commercially produced chemicals. This had the effect of drying the land
even more (and dragging many would-be "modern" farmers to bankruptcy, since
this model is much more expensive than the traditional one). Although the
yearly precipitation averages continue to be more or less the same as
historic values, there are now perceptible changes in the climate: the
rains are coming ever more violently and unpredictably and the period of
droughts is becoming longer and hotter.
The Sertão now depends on a totally unsustainable form of agriculture,
based on corn and beans, which only produce well two years in five, or
less. To compensate for the bad years, the farmers run cattle and goats and
hunt native fauna, with which the remaining Caatinga is blessed.
Unfortunately, in most regions, due to overstocking, this has affected the
local ecosystem to a point where it is having difficulty regenerating even
in rainy years, creating a downward spiral into desertification. Together
with the growing climate instability, this situation has provoked social
and economic instability, forcing millions of these dryland inhabitants to
migrate into the urban centers. This migration is a major cause of the
violent slums for which Brazil is famous.
The Drylands Polyculture Project
(Back to top)
It was in this dramatic scenario that the Drylands Polyculture Project was
born. It was observed that despite its apparently barren prospects, the
Sertão is a rich and prosperous land, producing many local and adapted
crops and fodder plants. The problem was not the climate-as is usually
implied-but the agricultural model, based on slash-and-burn, or worse,
European practices of cleancropping and tilling, totally inappropriate for
local conditions. In the old days, the small fields were never left bare,
being a rich and dense mish-mash of short-, middle- and long-term crops of
varying heights (corn, beans, tree cotton, castor bean, pumpkins, native
cucumbers, cowpeas, sesame, sunflowers, peanuts, cassava; some of these
crops reached tree height). Thus the overall destructive effects of the
slash-and-burn were limited to small areas, and compensated for by this
mixture of crops.
The Polyculture Model is, in part, an adaptation of the old model which in
itself is an imitation of the local ecosystem, including the factors of
density, biodiversity, and dynamism. As in the local ecosystem, there is a
variety of legume trees to help fix nitrogen, considerable organic mass
when the rains come, and woody ground cover (from tree prunings) during
drought, protecting the land long after other organic material has
decomposed. This guarantees permanent root masses which capture any drop of
rain, and leaf surface to capture the dew that is an important source of
humidity in this climate. These systems have demonstrated beyond a doubt
that where there is vegetation there is water, and not the contrary-the
denser the systems have been planted, the more humid they have remained,
long into the dry season.
Using this local model of biodiversity, density, and dynamism, various
combinations were implemented which contained the following elements:
drought-hardy forage plants which guarantee some production even in El Niño
years (such as Opuntia cactus); leguminous trees, some native, some
adapted, such as Gliricidia and Leucaena; plants to fix nitrogen and
produce biomass in general (jack beans (Canavalia) and pigeon pea (Cajanus
cajan ), and the above-mentioned leguminous trees); short-term catch crops
(radishes, sesame) planted in furrows with a bit of compost or manure, and
legume trees to replace them; castor bean (the main cash crop, resistant to
drought); rows of corn; and cowpeas filling in the rest of the space.
Ideally , there needs to be one plant every ten centimeters, especially in
poor soils where the plants do not fill out well and/or during the first
year. Cassava can also be included in this scheme, replacing one of the
corn rows. Cane grass could be an important element because it is an
excellent mulch grass when properly managed, but has not been included
because the farmers fear its potential invasiveness and do not want to
plant it.
[thumbnail of planting diagram]
Thumbnail link to planting diagram and picture of typical field, ~8K file
The fields are planted with cactus just before the rains come, four meters
between rows, one meter between plants. This effectively marks the field
(which can become quite complex!) so that the farmer can orient the rest of
the crops properly. Normally, in the same row as the cactus, castor bean is
planted in the dry soil, when the first signs of approaching rain appear
(native cactus flowering, etc.) When the rains come, seeds of fruits,
legumes, and fine hardwoods are planted together with the cactus, for the
future agroforest, and sesame is interplanted with the castor bean, since
the geometry of the two plants (castor bean round, sesame tall and
straight) combines well and efficiently uses the space. The four meters
between the castor bean rows are densely planted with food and legume
crops, interspersed with leguminous trees that will shade and protect the
space in the dry season.
[thumbnail image of polyculture field, northeastern Brazil]
Thumbnail link to picture of young polyculture field, ~48K file
The second year, when the rains are due again, the process is repeated,
this time pruning the leguminous trees and any other plant (castor bean,
pigeon pea) which survived the dry season and using the prunings as mulch
to protect the soil. As a result, the soil is gradually built up, improving
in fertility over the years.
Thus, from the same field, year after year, the farmer will harvest some
vegetables, corn, beans and cowpeas, sesame, pigeon pea, and (as the trees
mature) fruits for his table, while having castor bean for sale and fodder
for his animals (taking care not to rob the field of its biomass! Any
fodder harvested must be returned in the form of manure). In the worst
years he may harvest mostly fodder plants, but this will guarantee that he
will always have meat and milk to eat and income from the sale of the
animals to buy other food, thus avoiding total collapse of the system. We
believe that with this system even in the worst years he should also have
some castor bean crop, giving enough income to get through the bad times
and not have to migrate.
A second phase of this project will be the conservation of food for the dry
season, especially hay for the animals and dried leaf meal for the humans.
(This dried meal, produced from leaves of crops such as cowpeas, pigeon
peas and cassava, is added to such foods as bean dishes and soups. Besides
being tasty, it helps counter vitamin A deficiencies, which are common on
the region.) Of course the family will also need ample cisterns to
guarantee drinking water for the family and animals, an aspect which is
being intensely addressed by local NGOs.
These polycultures are so healthy that absolutely no form of artificially
produced chemical is necessary to maintain them. They have proved to be
resistant to insects and other diseases, even when growing side-by-side
with infected fields. The biomass and presence of legumes eliminate need
for manures, which become an element of luxury, used, when available, to
increase the production of the short-term crops.
[thumbnail link to castor bean chart]
Thumbnail link to chart of castor bean contribution to Brazilian GNP, ~9K file
This polyculture model, as developed by Ernst Gotsch, a Swiss
farmer/researcher who has been developing agroforest models for Brazil for
the last 15 years, is more than ten years old. However, the project of
large-scale planting of demonstration fields only began this year. The
project is financed by the local castor bean industry, which was interested
in having a steadier supply of raw materials. These first demonstration
fields have given spectacular results: one farmer harvested the equivalent
of 1,400 Reais (about 700 dollars) from one hectare alone. This is about
double the regional average income per hectare and compares very favorably
to the state's minimum salary of 150 Reais per month or 1,800 Reais per
year. Furthermore, this sum does not include the armfuls of corn and
pumpkins that the farmer gave to his many curious visitors, and the food he
harvested for his own table during this first season. He is so happy with
the results that he plans to plant 10 hectares in the model next season.
Thirty of his neighbors are also planning to try out the model. Not all the
demonstration plots gave such spectacular yields, sometimes due to the
severely degraded soils, sometimes due to the farmer not implementing the
model as designed (they find it hard to believe that they can plant so
densely and still harvest something!) But ALL plots produced significantly
better than the conventional plots, and all promise to weather over this
first dry season with some vegetative cover. This means that the soil is
being protected and improved, promising better results for the coming year.
The success of these field runs has caught the attention of the state
agriculture department and the local extension service, and even of one
local bank, which is considering changing policy to demand the polyculture
model as a condition for financing. When the next rains come, there are
plans to plant 300 demonstration plots, with the direct involvement of the
extension agents who then will be responsible for spreading the model even
further.
With this simple yet powerful technique, we hope, in the space of a few
years, to substantially lessen the tide of land degradation and mass
migration from the Brazilian drylands, thus helping to rescue this rich
area from social and economic collapse.
[bar denoting end of article text]
Author information
(Back to top)
Marsha Hanzi is the founder of the Bahian Permaculture Institute. She works
with a multi-disciplinary team in helping farmers and new communities
develop sustainable systems. In existence since 1992, the Institute has
been responsible for training numerous professionals in agroforest
techniques and sustainable design. They offer traineeships to students from
around the world. The Institute will also host the Second Latinamerican
Permaculture Congress at the end September 2001 in the Chapada Diamantina
Mountains of Bahia.
Those interested can get in touch with her by email at hanzibra at svn.com.br
Web site (in Portuguese): http://www.geocities.com/ipbbr
Additional web resources:
(Back to top)
Special: Biodiversity for Food and Agriculture
http://www.fao.org/sd/epdirect/epre0039.htm
From the FAO's Sustainable Development database, this online document is
extracted from "Human Nature: Agricultural Biodiversity and Farm-based Food
Security" by Hope Shand, an independent study prepared by the Rural
Advancement Foundation International (RAFI) for the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (December 1997).
Cultivating Diversity: Agrobiodiversity and Food Security
http://www.undp.org/seed/food/pages/publications/4.2/culdivagro.pdf
This 1998 report, prepared by the World Resources Institute and available
from the United Nations Development Programme web site, summarizes the
importance of agrobiodiversity to food security, productivity, and
ecological sustainability. It proposes guidelines to help meet the
worldwide need for food while safeguarding opportunities for farmers and
their communities. NB: this is a large document!
About the Arid Lands Newsletter
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