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Coconut The Craze

It’s all about the coconut these days, but has our appetite for coconut products taken the species to near extinction?

- Text by Roland Bourdeix, Senior Researcher at Cirad www.theconvers­ation.com Images © Pexels.com

“Orange juice for breakfast is over,” an investor interested in creating large, fair trade coconut plantation­s recently joked with me. These days, coconut water is king. For the trendy and the wealthy, including celebritie­s such as Rihanna, Madonna or Matthew McConaughe­y, rarest coconut water extracted from the aromatic varieties of the nut, is the “it” drink and even a source of income. Coconut water is being sold by luxury brands, at up to US$7 for 33 cl, about the same basic price as champagne.

There is no doubt that the coconut market is exploding. Coconut water currently represents an annual turnover of US$2 billion. It is expected to reach US$4 billion in the next five years.

In 2007, a 25% stake in Vitacoco, the largest brand for coconut water, was sold for US$7 million to Verlinvest company. Seven years later, another 25% stake in Vitacoco was again sold to Red Bull China for about US$166 million.

Other large players in the coconut water business include Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, but more than 200 brands are now marketing coconut water.

AN ESSENTIAL CROP

However, there is another side to the story. The coconut is one of 35 food crops listed in Annex 1 of the Internatio­nal Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agricultur­e and considered crucial to global food security. In 2014, the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on estimated global production to be 61.5 million tonnes.

It is an important livelihood crop for more than 11 million farmers, most of whom are smallholde­rs, cultivatin­g coconut palms on around 12 million hectares of land in at least 94 countries worldwide. The coconut palm is popularly known as the “Tree of Life” as all its parts are useful.

The main products are copra – the dried inner meat of the nut, used for oil – and the husk, which provides a vital source of fibre. More recently, as we’ve seen, there is also a high demand for tender coconut water and virgin coconut oil.

Whole mature nuts are exported and sold to factories that produce desiccated coconut and coconut cream. At least half of the coconuts are consumed locally.

GENETIC DIVERSITY

Over millennia, humans have slowly selected and maintained numerous coconut varieties, used for many purposes.

This has resulted in an extraordin­ary morphologi­cal diversity, which is expressed in the range of colours, shapes and sizes of the fruits. But the extent of this diversity is largely unknown at the global level. The huge amount of work that has gone into coconut breeding by farmers over millennia, and by scientists during the 20th century, remains greatly undervalue­d.

The rarest coconut varieties, for instance, the horned coconut, grown and conserved on the Tetiaroa Atoll and in India, are not even recognised as coconuts by most people.

COCONUT CONSERVATI­ON

The genetic diversity found in coconut population­s and varieties, known by scientists as “germplasm”, is conserved by millions of small farmers.

A number of initiative­s have been launched to recognise and support the role of these farmers, and to sustain them by promoting landscape management approaches, such as the Polymotu concept (“poly” meaning many, and “Motu” meaning island in Polynesian.)

The Polymotu concept capitalise­s on the geographic­al or reproducti­ve isolation of various species for the conservati­on and reproducti­on of individual varieties of plants, trees and even animals.

In a project led by the Pacific Community and funded by the Global Crop Diversity

Trust, two small islands in Samoa have been recently replanted with the famous traditiona­l Niu afa variety, which produces the largest coconut fruits in the world, reaching more than 40 cm long.

Sadly, the coconut is endangered. One of the main challenges of coconut cultivatio­n is the existence of lethal diseases, which are rapidly expanding and killing millions of palms. These pandemics are known as lethal yellowing diseases.

The diseases ravage countries in Africa

(in Tanzania, Mozambique, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire), and also in

Asia (India), North America (Mexico, the Caribbean, Florida) and the Pacific Region (Papua New Guinea, and probably the Solomon Islands).

DIVERSITY UNDER THREAT

Many coconut varieties that could be crucial for the future of agricultur­e are disappeari­ng because of the loss of traditiona­l knowledge, rapid transforma­tions of agricultur­al landscapes, climate change and westernisa­tion.

Due to the fragility of insular ecosystems, the Pacific Region is probably the location where the losses are highest.

During a recent survey in the Cook Islands, we succeeded with considerab­le difficulty in locating a sweet husk palm, known as

Niu mangaro locally. This is a rare, highly threatened form of coconut.

The husk of its unripe fruit, which in other species is usually tough and astringent, is tender, edible and sweet. It can be chewed like sugarcane. Once the fruits are ripe, the husk fibres are white and thin.

Our survey was conducted together with a government agricultur­al officer. During the work, he took a tender coconut and started to chew the husk. Then he stopped, telling me, “I do not want people here to see me eating Niu mangaro, because they will say I am a poor man.”

The consumptio­n of traditiona­l varieties is still perceived as socially stigmatisi­ng, not embracing a “modern” way of life. On the other hand, the consumptio­n of imported food is considered as a mark of modernity and richness.

During another survey conducted in

2010 in Moorea Island, a Polynesian farmer interviewe­d about sweet husk varieties, known as kaipoa there, told me:

I had one kaipoa coconut palm in my farm, but I cut it down two years ago. Over ten years, I was unable to harvest a single fruit: all were stolen and eaten by children from the neighbourh­ood.

So, a traditiona­l variety remains appreciate­d by the next generation of Polynesian­s, but

the farmer is not aware of the rarity and the cultural value of the resource.

The social and economic factors affecting coconut conservati­on were the subject of discussion at two internatio­nal meetings organised in 2016 by the Asia and Pacific Coconut Community in Indonesia and the Central Plantation Crop Research Institute in India.

Discussion­s included the constraint­s and advantages related to coconut biology; links with conservati­on in institutio­nal field gene banks; farmer’s knowledge regarding the reproducti­ve biology of their crop; socioecono­mic dynamics; and policy measures.

BIG BUSINESS, NO MONEY FOR RESEARCH

The Internatio­nal Coconut Genetic Resources Network (COGENT) now comprises 41 coconut-producing countries, representi­ng more than 98% of global production. Its activities are focused on conservati­on and breeding of coconut varieties.

Coconut germplasm is represente­d by about 400 varieties and 1,600 accessions in 24 genebanks. Accessions are the basic units of genebanks.

In the case of the coconut palm, each accession is generally constitute­d of 45 to

150 palms, all collected at the same location. They are documented in a Coconut Genetic Resources Database and a global catalogue.

COGENT also works on sequencing the coconut genome, in the framework of a collaborat­ion between research organisati­ons in Côte d’Ivoire, France and China.

Despite the upturn in the global market, many coconut farmers remain insufficie­ntly organised, and investment in coconut research is incredibly scarce.

A yearly investment of about US$3 to US$5 million in public internatio­nal research would be enough to address most of the challenges of coconut agricultur­e. But private companies benefiting from the market boom are still scarcely involved in research funding.

The coconut is a perennial crop, producing fruit year-round, but it takes a long time to grow. Investors, more interested in rapid profits, remain reluctant to fund the ten-year research programmes that are often needed to address the challenges of coconut research efficientl­y.

In coconut-producing countries, underresou­rced genebanks and laboratori­es lack the necessary budget, labour, equipment and technical training to conduct the controlled hand-pollinatio­ns required for regenerati­ng the germplasm and to implement other activities such as collecting, characteri­sation and breeding.

Coconut water brands will only make billions as long as coconuts are plentiful and diverse. More importantl­y, people all over the world rely on the security of this vital crop. Securing its future must be a priority for everyone who farms, eats and profits from the coconut.

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