Study Finds Benefits in Natural Crop
Biodiversity instead of pesticide poisons increase crops.
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Subject: Study Finds Benefits in Natural Crop-----
Date: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 06:52:08 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: Paul Helliker <phelliker@cdpr.ca.gov>
Director, State of
California, Department of Pesticide Regulation
Dear Mr. Helliker, I
thought you might find the attached article interesting, it is entitled: Study
Finds Benefits in Natural Crop, it was Updated 3:32 PM ET August 16, 2000 - By
JEFF BARNARD, Associated Press Writer.
Chinese farmers who abandoned the modern practice of
planting a single type of rice in their paddies and adopted the more natural
course of mixing varieties were rewarded with bigger harvests, and they no
longer had to spray expensive fungicides.
While the benefits of genetic diversity were known to
Darwin, the study serves as an important reminder at a time when agriculture is
increasingly looking to high-tech solutions (POISONS), said Martin S. Wolfe of
Wakelyns Agroforestry in Pressingfield, England.
"This deceptively simple experiment deserves wide
attention, partly because of the principle that it illustrates, and partly
because it may never be repeated on such a scale," Wolfe wrote in a
commentary on the study, published in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.
Oregon State University plant pathologist Christ Mundt and
colleagues organized farmers in five townships in China's Yunnan Province in
1998 to switch from planting a single variety of sticky rice - a practice known
as monoculture - to alternating rows of sticky rice with hybrid varieties.
Seeing their neighbors getting bigger harvests and saving
money on fungicide, farmers in 10 townships joined the experiment in 1999,
bringing the total area of farms switching to diverse planting to 8,255 acres.
Though the sticky rice brings a higher price, it is
susceptible to a fungus known as rice blast, which reduces yields and is
generally controlled by spraying with expensive chemicals (POISONS).
Planting different varieties of rice in the same field cut
the incidence of rice blast in the sticky rice by 94 percent and increased
yields by 89 percent.
Though more research is needed to pinpoint why, it appears
that the alternating rows of different varieties thwarted the spread of rice
blast, Mundt said.
"One way of thinking about this monoculture would be
kind of like a field of dry grass: Drop a match in it. There is nothing to stop
the fire from moving through it," Mundt said.
"A mixed population is like a field of dry grass and
wet grass. Drop a match one there
and it is going to be slowed down. It will burn up a dry grass patch, then hit a
wet one."
Oregon wheat farmers already plant a mix of varieties in
their fields, but rice farmers tend toward monoculture, because planting,
harvesting and selling the crop are easier with one variety.
"I think our goal should be to fool with Mother Nature
as little as possible," Mundt said. "Sometimes there is a simple
fundamental fix that makes a whole lot more sense than going for a real
high-tech system (POISON)."
Well Mr. Helliker, this is just one more example of the
thousands of safe and far more effective alternatives to your
"registered" POISONS. When
will it be "legal" (in your opinion) for trained, licensed pest
control operators to use unregistered alternatives to actually control pest
problems in California? Why do you
continue to "register" and promote POISONS and ignore common sense
controls?
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