| Literature DB >> 29259614 |
Oren Shelef1, Peter J Weisberg2, Frederick D Provenza3.
Abstract
For addressing potential food shortages, a fundamental tradeoff exists between investing more resources to increasing productivity of existing crops, as opposed to increasing crop diversity by incorporating more species. We explore ways to use local plants as food resources and the potential to promote food diversity and agricultural resilience. We discuss how use of local plants and the practice of local agriculture can contribute to ongoing adaptability in times of global change. Most food crops are now produced, transported, and consumed long distances from their homelands of origin. At the same time, research and practices are directed primarily at improving the productivity of a small number of existing crops that form the cornerstone of a global food economy, rather than to increasing crop diversity. The result is a loss of agro-biodiversity, leading to a food industry that is more susceptible to abiotic and biotic stressors, and more at risk of catastrophic losses. Humans cultivate only about 150 of an estimated 30,000 edible plant species worldwide, with only 30 plant species comprising the vast majority of our diets. To some extent, these practices explain the food disparity among human populations, where nearly 1 billion people suffer insufficient nutrition and 2 billion people are obese or overweight. Commercial uses of new crops and wild plants of local origin have the potential to diversify global food production and better enable local adaptation to the diverse environments humans inhabit. We discuss the advantages, obstacles, and risks of using local plants. We also describe a case study-the missed opportunity to produce pine nuts commercially in the Western United States. We discuss the potential consequences of using local pine nuts rather than importing them overseas. Finally, we provide a list of edible native plants, and synthesize the state of research concerning the potential and challenges in using them for food production. The goal of our synthesis is to support more local food production using native plants in an ecologically sustainable manner.Entities:
Keywords: Pinus edulis; Pinus monophylla; domestication; local food; plant utilization; regenerative agriculture
Year: 2017 PMID: 29259614 PMCID: PMC5723411 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.02069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 6.627
Figure 1A conceptual diagram illustrating the production cycle of edible plants from nature to plate. Commercialization of a new plant involves three phases: (A) finding a species with potential for safe use commercially—the species may be used already by indigenous people or may be totally novel; (B) establishing the technique for production through cultivation or gathering; (C) developing ways to harvest, store, and deliver the crop.
Examples of some edible plants of the new world, main consumption practice and possible reasons for commercialization hurdles.
| Açaí palm | Northern South America | Fruit and fruit pulp | Juice and juice as additive | Irregular supply, inconsistent quality, lack know-how in cultivation and processing | Pacheco-Palencia et al., | |
| Agave | Mexico, Southwestern United States | Tequila, sweetener, potential biofuel | Traditionally grown in Mexico, local know-how and plant adaptations hinder wide distribution | Nobel, | ||
| Banana yucca | South Western United States | Fruit | Fresh or heated | Moerman, | ||
| Berries: Huckleberry, Raspberry, Salmonberry, Saskatoon serviceberry, Thimbleberry | North America | Fruits | Raw, dried, or as juice and jam | Yield fluctuations, cultivation barriers, fire management. Some cultivation developed in the last decade | Moerman, | |
| Biscuitroot | Western North America | Roots | Starchy food, cooked or grained to flour | Herzog, | ||
| Bitterroot | Western North America | Roots | Traditional delicacy | Bandringa, | ||
| California Black Oak (among other species) | Western United States | Acorns | Staple food for direct consumption, flour, oil | Long generation time, harvest is hard, expensive labor, process is needed (dry roasting, grinding, press) | Wolf, | |
| Cassava | West-central Brazil | USO | Starch for flour | Palate preferences limit it mainly to the southern hemisphere | Caballero-Arias, | |
| Chokecherry (bitter-berry) | North America | Fruit | Cooked jelly, jam, syrup, and wine | Hard to collect or domesticate, need processing | Moerman, | |
| Common Sunflower | North America | Seeds, flower bud | raw, roasted, cooked, dried, and ground, oil, coffee substitute | Commercially used | Heiser, | |
| Honey mesquite | Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico | Pods | Starchy flour | Moerman, | ||
| Indian rice grass | North America | Seeds | Flour | Cultivated as Gluten-free grain | Dunmire and Tierney, | |
| Joshua Tree | Arid southwestern United States | Seeds, flower buds | Oil | Product is not attractive to justify cultivation. Low indexes of cultural significance Stoffle et al., | Wolf, | |
| Mushrooms | Sporocarp (fruit body) | Food, medicine | Lack of knowledge on gathering patterns, gathering systems are laborious | Richards, | ||
| Pinweed | North America | Entire plant | Lovell, | |||
| Pinyon Pine nuts | New world | seeds | Raw food, pesto industry, oil, | Long generation time, harvest is hard, expensive labor, cheaper substitutes, seed extraction | Sharashkin and Gold, | |
| Saguaro | Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico | Fruits | Fermented drink | Moerman, | ||
| Sego lily | Western United States | USO (underground storage organs), seeds, and flowers | starchy grain | Cultivated as ornamental plant, slow maturation of bulbs | Herzog, | |
| Wild onions and garlic | Northern Hemisphere | Roots, leaves | Direct or cooked | Of hundreds species only handful are cultivated | Rabinowitch and Currah, |
An exhaustive list of all edible plants is out of the scope of this paper. Organized by alphabetically order of the common names.
We decided to focus in the New World, where agriculture history stretched back only several decades. Farmers in the Americas could chose to develop local plants, or utilize crops they imported from the Old World. This short history is emphasizing the tendency to prefer a limited number of local or imported crops rather than expanding agrodiversity by using local plants.
Figure 2Conceptual illustration of local food production, native plants and agro-diversity. Illustrations (A–G) describe the differences between native plant resources and local production, discussed further in the text. The plate represents a human community of consumers, and the squares represent their food resources. The area of each square represents its actual size and its relative contribution to the food supply of the consumers. A small square stands for a native plant that can supply food only when grown in its native range. The total area of squares is equal in all figures. (A) a community and its food demand; (B) a community reliant on four crops that each supply a quarter of the demand; (C) a community reliant on a high variety of plant resources, 25 times more diverse than community B; (D) a community fed by four plant resources, one of them is in proximity, the other three distant, demanding long chain of transports. Black arrows denote transport or food miles; (E) a community relying on one short-chain food resource and many small resources with long supply chains; (F) a mixture of one big resource in the vicinity of the community, two big and remote sources, and some small resources, most of them remote and two are local; (G) a community relying on a variety of locally grown plants.