Humans have radically altered the evolution of agricultural plants since World War Two, remaking our seed system with industrial agricultural practices to feed a growing population. Yet in the changing climate of decades to come, 日韩无码 researchers say, the seeds that will feed the world are in the hands of smallholder farmers.

In a new discussion in , Chen and coauthors examine how the emergence of professional crop breeders have 鈥渄isrupted evolutionary processes鈥 to 鈥渞eshape the entire food system.鈥 The mass production of high-yielding seeds in limited varieties has created a chasmic divide between a 鈥渇ormal seed system,鈥 which now sells most seeds worldwide, and the 鈥渋nformal seed system鈥, which consists of farmers who select their own seeds to develop diverse, locally adapted crop varieties, known as landraces.

In selecting these landraces, smallholder farmers provide evosystem services鈥攖he benefits we gain from biodiversity, developed through evolutionary processes, Chen, a Fellow at the , explains. These services include crops鈥 adaptation to stresses including drought, salinity and pests, which, she adds, are expected to increase as the climate warms, noting such services are crucial for the future of sustainability.

鈥淔ormal seed system crop breeders have selected varieties with a singular focus on achieving high yields,鈥 Chen says. 鈥淭he assumption is that breeding is a science of unlocking a crop鈥檚 yield potential鈥攖hat modernity will feed the world.鈥 This has been achieved using fertilizers, irrigation, and pesticides to recreate essentially the same fertile environment regardless of location. Crop breeders have selected modern seed varieties to grow in these ideal conditions, Chen says.

Modern Seeds Are Feeling the Heat

But outside those conditions, crop plants have evolved alongside microbial and animal species to tolerate a wide range of environments. For example, many plants produce compounds that attract local insects to prey on the plant鈥檚 parasites. In other words, says Chen, they鈥檝e evolved a trait to 鈥渃all in bodyguards.鈥

But plants from mass-produced seed haven鈥檛 retained this trait, which they don鈥檛 need with 鈥渃onstant support from pesticides,鈥 Chen says. Having lost this ancient connection to their environment, plants don鈥檛 issue that call for help: 鈥渇ormal seed system crops have been selected to be mute.鈥

Of course, humans guiding crops鈥 evolution is nothing new, Chen says. Similar to interactions between plant and ecosystem, selective crop breeding by humans shapes crops for the places and climates where they鈥檙e planted. Conversely, depending on crops with high yields but no connection to their environment is a tradeoff. One-size-fits-all agriculture is quickly becoming an untenable prospect under the extreme heat or drought that many agricultural areas anticipate.

So what happens in extreme climates, when we can no longer create the perfect environment for formal seed system crops?

The Need for Diverse Seeds

The solution, Chen and co-authors propose, lies in pockets, sheds and barns across the world: that vast diversity of landrace seeds, tucked away by people growing crops in every possible ecosystem. Bred to yield in the mountains, deltas and deserts where farmers plant them, landrace seeds have the best chance of carrying the hardy traits needed to survive in whatever conditions climate change has in store.

鈥淟andraces hold traits that will help the more commercial varieties adapt to local conditions,鈥 Chen says: those evosystem services, bred into landrace seeds as fully as their vibrant flavors and colors.

But the issue isn鈥檛 just genetics, and Chen, an insect evolutionary ecologist, works with an interdisciplinary team including sociologists and plant geneticists. In modern agriculture, Chen sees 鈥渘eocolonial ideas around who gets to decide what is important.鈥 The farmers who鈥檝e developed landraces are often smallholders in historically colonized places, their work unvalued in industrial agriculture or academic research.

The seed diversity smallholder farmers grow has been considered 鈥渁 global public good,鈥 Chen says. 鈥淏ut what's in it for the smallholder farmer who's incurred the costs of growing these landrace seeds?鈥 As climate conditions make modern agricultural practices unsustainable, the solution isn鈥檛 for industrialized countries to ask seed-saving smallholders in developing countries, 鈥溾極ur crops are failing; can we have your seeds?鈥欌 Chen says.

鈥淲e need to find mechanisms for valuing and sharing seed diversity, to manage the evolution of our food crops,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd we don鈥檛 need to ask smallholder farmers around the world to carry the future of food security.鈥

Instead, Chen and her colleagues are creating a policy brief to share their knowledge with policymakers. Their goal is to establish practices that promote benefit-sharing to properly support smallholder farmers for the seed diversity they鈥檝e created. A concurrent goal is finding ways to incorporate these farmers鈥 knowledge so this seed diversity can be utilized for the next generation of large-scale crops.

 鈥淚t's a paradigm shift from this 鈥榶ield, yield, yield鈥 mentality,鈥 Chen says. 鈥淲e must center evolution and biodiversity in our agricultural processes. That鈥檚 how you achieve sustainability.鈥

Yolanda Chen is a professor in the Department of Plant and Soil Science at 日韩无码鈥檚 College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. Her coauthors on this paper include, from 日韩无码鈥檚 College of Agricultural and Life Sciences: Daniel Tobin, Gund Fellow and professor in the Department of Community Development and Applied Economics; Eric von Wettberg, Gund Fellow and professor in the Department of Plant and Soil Science; and Jorge Ruiz-Arocho, Gund Graduate Fellow in the Food Systems Research Center. Other coauthors are Alicia Mastretta-Yanes and Gund Affiliate Mauricio R. Bellon of Comisi贸n Nacional para el Conocimiento y Uso de la Biodiversidad (CONABIO); Ana Wegier, Ana Sof铆a Monroy-Sais and Nancy G谩lvez-Reyes of Universidad Nacional Aut贸noma de M茅xico; and Ang茅lica Cibri谩n-Jaramillo of Naturalis Biodiversity Center.