| Literature DB >> 26973824 |
Alder Keleman Saxena1, Ximena Cadima Fuentes2, Rhimer Gonzales Herbas2, Debbie L Humphries3.
Abstract
Inhabitants of the high-mountain Andes have already begun to experience changes in the timing, severity, and patterning of annual weather cycles. These changes have important implications for agriculture, for human health, and for the conservation of biodiversity in the region. This paper examines the implications of climate-driven changes for native and traditional crops in the municipality of Colomi, Cochabamba, Bolivia. Data were collected between 2012 and 2014 via mixed methods, qualitative fieldwork, including participatory workshops with female farmers and food preparers, semi-structured interviews with local agronomists, and participant observation. Drawing from this data, the paper describes (a) the observed impacts of changing weather patterns on agricultural production in the municipality of Colomi, Bolivia and (b) the role of local environmental resources and conditions, including clean running water, temperature, and humidity, in the household processing techniques used to conserve and sometimes detoxify native crop and animal species, including potato (Solanum sp.), oca (Oxalis tuberosa), tarwi (Lupinus mutabilis), papalisa (Ullucus tuberosus), and charke (llama or sheep jerky). Analysis suggests that the effects of climatic changes on agriculture go beyond reductions in yield, also influencing how farmers make choices about the timing of planting, soil management, and the use and spatial distribution of particular crop varieties. Furthermore, household processing techniques to preserve and detoxify native foods rely on key environmental and climatic resources, which may be vulnerable to climatic shifts. Although these findings are drawn from a single case study, we suggest that Colomi agriculture characterizes larger patterns in what might be termed, "indigenous food systems." Such systems are underrepresented in aggregate models of the impacts of climate change on world agriculture and may be under different, more direct, and more immediate threat from climate change. As such, the health of the food production and processing environments in such systems merits immediate attention in research and practice.Entities:
Keywords: Andean agriculture; Bolivia; agrobiodiversity; climate change impacts; food security; indigenous food systems
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973824 PMCID: PMC4776077 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2016.00020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Schematic of altitudinal gradient between Cochabamba and Amazonian Floodplain, with approximate altitudes (not to scale). (A) Urban Cochabamba, approximately 2700 masl; (B) puna (rural), approximately 4200 masl; (C) sub-puna (rural/urbanizing), approximately 3200 masl; (D) montane tropical zone (rural), approximately 2200 masl; (E) Villa Tunari (Amazon floodplain), approximately 400 masl.
Relationship between categories of data presented and field research methods.
| Data type | Participatory workshops with rural farmers | Participant observation | Semi-structured interviews with local agronomists | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Household food preparation | Potato cultivation | |||
| Agriculture and climate change in Colomi | X | X | X | |
| Native crop preparation practices | X | X | ||
Historic planting periods in Colomi, with approximate harvest seasons.
Current annual weather patterns reported in five rural study sites in Colomi, Bolivia.
Approximate timing of potato planting activities reported in five rural sites in Colomi, Bolivia.
Figure 2Spatial schematic of Oca harvest and processing from participatory workshop in Colomi, Bolivia. (1) Oca tubers are dug from field with pick-axe (piquete); (2) harvested tubers are bagged in plastic burlap sacks (gangochos); (3) Oca tubers are transported from field to a running water source (stream or river) for washing; (4) Oca tubers are transported to farmer’s home; (5) tubers are spread on ground to dry and sorted by size; (6) small tubers selected for immediate consumption are left spread to sweeten in the sunshine (on the ground or the rooftop) for up to a week; (7) Oca tubers selected for sale are transported to market on local roads; (8) Oca tubers are sold in twice-weekly market in Colomi municipal seat; (9) tubers not selected for market are prepared for home consumption.
Figure 3Spatial schematic of tarwi harvest and processing adapted from material generated in participatory workshops in Pico Central and Linde/Pisly, Colomi, Bolivia. (1) Tarwi plants are left in the field and are allowed to dry in the sun. (2) Tarwi grain is threshed, allowing the wind to remove the husk; thin or green grains are removed; and good grain is gathered in bags. (3) Tarwi bags are transported to household. (4) Tarwi is boiled in home kitchen. (5) Boiled tarwi is taken to the river in by cuartillas (smaller volumes) and left to rinse for up to 1 week. (6) Tarwi is consumed directly as boiled grain (mote) or made into a soup (aguado).
Environmental resources used for processing and preparation of locally produced foods in Colomi, Bolivia.
| Environmental resources | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crop/breed | Product | Cold running water | Sunshine/daytime warmth | Low humidity | Nighttime freeze |
| X | |||||
| X | X | X | |||
| X | X | X | |||
| X | X | X | |||
| X | |||||
| X | |||||
| X | X | ||||
Ideal periods for the preparation of chuño and charke, as reported in Linde, Colomi, Bolivia.
Pathways of potential climate/weather change impacts on the production and consumption of native and traditional crops in Colomi, Bolivia.
| Mechanism | Cause | Potential outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Reduction of yields | Increased exposure to drought or pest/disease pressure, especially at lower altitudes | • Increase in relative cost of native potato cultivation vs. commercial varieties |
| Reduction in number of yearly harvests | Decreased predictability of onset and duration of annual precipitation | • Decreases number of harvests available per year |
| Increased difficulty of local processing | Decreased availability or predictability of environmental resources (water, temperature, humidity) required for local processing techniques | • Potential for increased toxicity or spoilage, or reduced palatability in absence of conditions for traditional processing (potato, tarwi, oca, chuño) |