人类对农业生态系统持续进化过程的管理

Alicia Mastretta‐Yanes, Daniel Tobin, Mauricio R. Bellon, E. V. von Wettberg, Angelica Cibrian-Jaramillo, A. Wegier, A. S. Monroy‐Sais, Nancy Gálvez‐Reyes, Jorge Ruiz‐Arocho, Yolanda H. Chen
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摘要

农业的可持续性取决于作物对当地环境的适应性。保存种子的小农通过种植适应当地环境的种子品种,提供了一项重要的 "进化系统 "服务,这些种子品种可以吸收生物多样性来增强其生长和防御能力。专业植物育种使进化过程偏离了当地适应性,而小农,尤其是作物原产地中心的小农,通过选择和繁殖多样化的作物品种,使当地适应性过程得以延续,从而造福社会。鉴于小农通过创造生态系统服务来支持社会,因此需要改变政策和做法,以减轻风险的方式支持小农的生计,并承认他们对农业可持续发展的重要贡献。长期的粮食安全和农业可持续发展取决于保护选择作物本地适应性的生态进化过程。由于种子系统决定了人们获取种子的方式,因此制度和社会变革会影响农业生态系统的进化过程。自第二次世界大战以来,专业育种的兴起将种子系统分为传统系统和正规系统,这对农业生物多样性、作物进化和农业可持续性产生了负面影响。在传统的种子系统中,农民通常从最能提供所需品质的植物中保存种子,选择适应当地环境条件的陆生作物品种。在正规或中央种子系统中,农民购买的种子主要是为了在理想条件下获得最大产量。当农民从外部获取种子时,当地适应性的进化过程就会被打乱。在此,我们认为传统的种子系统提供了重要的生态系统服务,即维护和利用遗传多样性所产生的进化过程,从而造福社会。我们提出了一个框架,说明种子系统如何影响实现本地适应的进化过程,而本地适应是可持续农业所必需的。我们讨论了作为传统和正规种子系统基础的人类价值观的变化如何改变支撑当地适应性的进化过程。我们的结论是,需要制定政策,支持人们管理种子系统内的生态和进化过程,以应对当前和未来全球粮食安全和农业可持续发展的挑战。
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Human management of ongoing evolutionary processes in agroecosystems
Agricultural sustainability depends on the adaptation of crops to their local environment. Smallholder farmers who save seed provide an essential “evosystem” service by growing locally adapted seed varieties that can recruit biodiversity to enhance their growth and defense. While professional plant breeding has diverted evolutionary processes away from local adaptation, smallholder farmers, particularly those in centers of origin for crops, benefit society by selecting and propagating diverse crop varieties that allow local adaptation processes to perpetuate. Given that smallholders support society through the generation of evosystem services, changes in policy and practice are needed to support the livelihoods of smallholder farmers in ways that mitigate risk and recognize their important contributions to agricultural sustainability.Long‐term food security and agricultural sustainability depend on protecting the eco‐evolutionary processes that select for local adaptation in crops. Since seed systems structure how people acquire seed, institutional and social changes influence evolutionary processes within agroecosystems. Since World War II, the rise of professional breeding has bifurcated seed systems into traditional and formal systems, which has negatively affected agrobiodiversity, crop evolution, and agricultural sustainability. In traditional seed systems, farmers often save seed from plants that best provide desired qualities, selecting landrace crop varieties to adapt to local environmental conditions. In formal or centralized seed systems, farmers buy seeds bred primarily for maximizing yield under ideal conditions. When farmers source seeds externally, evolutionary processes underlying local adaptation are disrupted. Here, we argue that traditional seed systems provide important evosystem services, or the evolutionary processes resulting from the maintenance and use of genetic diversity that benefit society. We present a framework on how seed systems influence the evolutionary processes that enable local adaptation, which is necessary for sustainable agriculture. We discuss how changes in human values underlying traditional and formal seed systems can alter evolutionary processes that underlie local adaptation. We conclude that developing policies that support people in managing ecological and evolutionary processes within seed systems is needed to address current and future challenges of global food security and agricultural sustainability.
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