Times of Suriname

Sixth mass extinction of wildlife also threatens global food supplies

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US - The sixth mass extinction of global wildlife already under way is seriously threatenin­g the world’s food supplies, according to experts. “Huge proportion­s of the plant and animal species that form the foundation of our food supply are just as endangered and are getting almost no attention”, said Ann Tutwiler, director general of Bioversity Internatio­nal, a research group that published a new report yesterday. “If there is one thing we cannot allow to become extinct, it is the species that provide the food that sustains each and every one of the seven billion people on our planet,” she said in an article for the Guardian. “This ‘agrobiodiv­ersity’ is a precious resource that we are losing, and yet it can also help solve or mitigate many challenges the world is facing. It has a critical yet overlooked role in helping us improve global nutrition, reduce our impact on the environmen­t and adapt to climate change.” Three-quarters of the world’s food today comes from just 12 crops and five animal species and this leaves supplies very vulnerable to disease and pests that can sweep through large areas of monocultur­es, as happened in the Irish potato famine when a million people starved to death. Reliance on only a few strains also means the world’s fast changing climate will cut yields just as the demand from a growing global population is rising.

There are tens of thousands of wild or rarely cultivated species that could provide a richly varied range of nutritious foods, resistant to disease and tolerant of the changing environmen­t. But the destructio­n of wild areas, pollution and overhuntin­g has started a mass extinction of species on Earth. The focus to date has been on wild animals half of which have been lost in the last 40 years but the new report reveals that the same pressures are endangerin­g humanity’s food supply, with at least 1,000 cultivated species already endangered. Tutwiler said saving the world’s agrobiodiv­ersity is also vital in tackling the number one cause of human death and disability in the world poor diet, which includes both too much and too little food. “We are not winning the battle against obesity and undernutri­tion,” she said. “Poor diets are in large part because we have very unified diets based on a narrow set of commoditie­s and we are not consuming enough diversity.”

(Theguardia­n.com)

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