FAO in North America

Celebrating quinoa

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 5, 2013

Quinoa, the Andean “superfood” known by the Incas as the “mother of all grains”, is getting a promotional boost from the United Nations, which has declared 2013 the International Year of Quinoa.

The spotlight is overdue for this long-neglected crop, for centuries grown almost exclusively by indigenous communities in the Andean highlands but now being heralded by foodies and nutrition-conscious consumers around the world.

Why? Because quinoa packs a potent nutritional punch. In fact, it’s so rich in nutrients that NASA chose to include it in astronauts’ diets. Rich in protein and minerals, Quinoa is the only plant containing a complete range of amino acids. It’s also gluten free. What’s more, it is able to adapt to different ecological conditions and climates. Resistant to drought, poor soils and high salinity, it can be grown from sea level to an altitude of four thousand meters and can withstand extreme temperatures.

At the recent ceremony to kick off the International Year at UN Headquarters in New York, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon emphasized quinoa’s potential to contribute significantly to the “Zero Hunger Challenge” he launched in June 2012, while helping counter the effects of a warming planet.

New ally in hunger fight

FAO head José Graziano da Silva declared quinoa “a new ally in the fight against hunger and food insecurity” and noted that the crop was already showing potential in Kenya and Mali and could also be developed in other arid regions of the world.

The effort to promote quinoa is part of a broader FAO strategy to promote traditional or forgotten crops as a means to combat hunger and promote healthy eating.

“The International Year of Quinoa will serve not only to stimulate the development of the crop worldwide, but also as recognition that the challenges of the modern world can be confronted by calling on the accumulated knowledge of our ancestors and the small family farmers who currently are the major producers of the crop,” said Graziano da Silva.

FAO hopes that the yearlong series of cultural, artistic and academic activities, as well as scientific research, will contribute to the well-being of thousands of smallholder farmers and to consumers worldwide.

Gift of the Andes

Quinoa was of great nutritional importance to pre-Colombian Andean civilizations, second only to the potato. Traditionally, quinoa grains are roasted and then made into flour for bread. It can also be cooked, added to soups, used as a cereal, as pasta and even fermented into beer or chicha, the traditional drink of the Andes.

Quinoa production now extends beyond the Andean region and – besides Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Colombia and Argentina – it is also produced in the United States, Canada, France, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Kenya and India.

Learn more>>

Mountains and climate change

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on December 11, 2012

Today is International Mountain Day. Did you know that mountains are extremely vulnerable to climate change? Find out more in this animated video:

Debating conservation

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on July 6, 2012

Svalbard Global Seed VaultThe New York Times tackles conservation in its latest Room for Debate forum. Cary Fowler, executive director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, currently hosted by FAO in Rome, weighs in on the importance of gene banks. The Trust manages the mother of all seed banks –  the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, pictured above.

“Conserving the plants that feed us – our crops – is a distinct challenge because it is not the species, but the genetic diversity within species that is the focus. And the “use value,” another hotly contested topic, is undisputed: it is a simple fact that without access to crop diversity, we will not be able to grow the food we require in the future. Diversity is a prerequisite for crop improvement and adaptation.”

Storing agrobiodiversity

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on March 20, 2012

Just as backing up the contents of a computer on an external hard drive is a way to ensure important data and files are not lost, so too is creating a back-up of the world’s crop genetic diversity an important way to manage the risk of losing important seed varieties. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault serves that role, housing the resources from 1,750 seed banks from around the globe.

A recent article in The Economist explores the role the vault has played in preserving seed diversity, noting that approximately two-thirds of the world’s stored crop genetic resources are maintained in the Nordic facility. Moreover, a new effort may soon be under way to collect seeds of crop wild ancestors. The article discusses the significance such a comprehensive gene bank may have in terms of dealing with future crop diseases and pests. But at the same time, the authors recognize that preserving genetic diversity in the field, through proper land management and the use of multiple crop varieties, is an critical step to reducing long-term risks.

National Geographic profiled the so-called “doomsday vault” and other efforts to preserve seed diversity in an article last year. Read more>>

From the Amazon to La Pergola – an appreciation of forest food

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on December 21, 2011

As the International Year of Forests winds to a close, a new FAO study released this week shows how plants and fruits from Amazonian forests can be used to improve people’s diets and livelihoods. Written in easy-to-grasp language, Fruit Trees and Useful Plants in Amazonian Life seeks to take science out of the ivory tower and put it to work on the ground, in the hands of people.

While we’re on the subject of forest food, check out what’s cooking in chef Heinz Beck’s kitchen in this video from our friends at the International Year of Forests:

Climate change could worsen extinction crisis

Submitted by Steve Hirsch on December 6, 2011

Photo: ©FAO/Steve TerrillClimate change is likely to accelerate biodiversity loss, threatening more animal species with extinction as their habitats change, according to a new FAO report released earlier this week.

Wildlife in a changing climate examines likely ecosystem and landscape changes in forests, mountains, wetlands, coastal areas, savannahs, grasslands and steppes and their impact on physical conditions, weather patterns and ecosystem functioning.

“Terrestrial, freshwater and marine wildlife will be severely affected unless we manage to cope with climate changes through decisive planning and action,” the report says.

Climate change will affect such physical conditions as snow cover and sea level and result in increases in the irregularity and severity of such extreme weather events as droughts and floods, the report says.

Wildlife consequences, according to the report, include the emergence and increased spread of pathogens, affecting wildlife, humans and livestock; more conflicts between humans and wildlife over the same dwindling resources; and ecosystem changes.

The report also considers a number of responses to climate change, including protecting current ecosystems, adaptive management – such as moving species away from changed ecological conditions or modifying habitats, and restoring degraded ecosystems, particularly those like mangroves, forests, savannahs and grasslands that are important for climate change resilience.

Read the full report.

Degradation and scarcity of land and water put food security at risk

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on November 28, 2011

A new FAO report warns that widespread degradation and deepening scarcity of land and water resources have placed a number of key food production systems around the globe at risk, posing a profound challenge to the task of feeding a world population expected to reach 9 billion people by 2050.

Download the full report here, watch a webcast of today’s report launch or listen to an interview on the report’s finding with FAO expert Hubert George.

Learn more about FAO’s vision for the sustainable intensification of agricultural production in Save and Grow: A New Paradigm for Agriculture released earlier this year.

State of Land and Water Resources report

Preserving high-seas fisheries

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on November 16, 2011

The Global Environment Facility last week approved a broad-scale, innovative approach to address the depletion of high-seas fish stocks and biodiversity conservation.

The new initiative, which will be coordinated by FAO, brings together governments, regional fisheries management bodies, the private sector and non-governmental organizations to work together towards the sustainable use and conservation of these complex ecosystems.

The agreement signals a triple-win for food security, economic development and ocean biodiversity conservation, according to Árni Mathiesen, Assistant Director General of FAO’s Fisheries and Aquaculture Department:

“High-seas fisheries offer food security and livelihoods to millions of people worldwide. This broad international partnership is the best way forward to reduce overfishing and illegal fishing of the world´s oceans.”

Read more.

Rwanda, US and Gambia win forest policy awards

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on September 21, 2011

Forest policies from Rwanda, the United States and Gambia took the top honors in the 2011 Future Policy Award.

Rwanda’s National Forest Policy was crowned best in the world, with silver medals going to the US Lacey Act amendment of 2008, which prohibits all trade in illegally sourced wood and plant products, and Gambia’s FAO-supported Community Forestry Policy, the first in Africa to provide local populations with secure and permanent forest ownership rights.

The awards ceremony was held at the Central Park Zoo in New York, sponsored by the World Future Council in collaboration with FAO and other UN and environmental partners.

“I kind of know about awards, I’ve had a few myself and I think it’s much more important that we talk about this award because it affects everyone,” said FAO Goodwill Ambassador Carl Lewis at a press conference at UN headquarters in New York earlier in the day. In his athletic career, Lewis won 10 Olympic medals, nine of them gold.

Read more on the awards  and watch the announcement.

2011 Future Policy Award winners

LeafSnap – an app for armchair botanists

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on August 7, 2011

Citizen scientists have a new mobile app to add to their arsenal, a virtual field guide that allows them to identify tree species by taking a photograph of the tree’s leaves.

LeafSnap, developed by computer scientists at Columbia University and the University of Maryland, in collaboration with botanists at the Smithsonian, uses technology similar to that used in face recognition software. iPhone and iPad users can simply take a photo of a leaf and the app compares it with others in a central library of around 8000 images. 

“To its creators, LeafSnap isn’t just a way to put smartphone or tablet owners more in touch with the flora around them. It could be a way to tap the power of citizen science to map the spread and the diversity of trees in unprecedented detail. “

For now the app only covers trees and shrubs of the northeastern United States, but the developers hope to cover all the trees of North America within a few years.  The free app is available for iPad and iPhone, and an Android version is on the way.

Read more: LeafSnap – The Field Guide on Your iPhone – Popular Mechanics



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