This is Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
An environment that is biologically diverse has lots of different plants and animals. The Food and Agriculture Organization says this is needed for people to have enough high-quality food to lead active and healthy lives. For World Food Day this year, the United Nations agency chose the message: "Biodiversity for Food Security"
The idea of biodiversity recognizes that natural systems are complex and depend on one another.
In agriculture, depending on only a few crops can be dangerous. One example is the Great Potato Famine in the 1840s. Ireland depended on potatoes as a food resource. But a disease ruined the crop for several years. More than one million people died from hunger.
Yet experts say the world depends on only four crops to provide half its food energy from plants. These are wheat, maize, rice and potato.
The experts say it is important to support a large number of different food crops and farm animals that can survive different conditions. Such diversity helps to reduce the risk from losing one main crop.
Farmers also have a responsibility to protect wild species. The Food and Agriculture Organization says more than 40 percent of all land is used for agriculture. Farm fields are an important place for wild animals to live and reproduce.
Also, farmers must consider the effects that agriculture has on the environment. Farm pollution or poor agricultural methods can harm wetlands, rivers and other environments needed to support life.
The World Bank says invasive species are a severe threat to biodiversity. Plants and animals often spread without natural controls when they enter areas they are not native to. They can destroy crops, native species and property. Invasive species cost the world economy thousands of millions of dollars each year.
The World Bank says it is the world's largest supporter of biodiversity projects. It says its support had reached almost 5000 million dollars by the end of the 2004 financial year.
World Food Day is observed on October sixteenth. It celebrates the anniversary of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, which has its headquarters in Rome. The F.A.O. started in 1945 in Quebec City, Canada.
This VOA Special English Agriculture Report was written by Mario Ritter. |