Asia-Pacific has world's highest number of threatened species

About half of world's economy and 80 per cent of needs of poor derived from biological resources

PTI | October 25, 2010



The Asia-Pacific region has the world's highest number of threatened species, an International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) report said.

Asia-Pacific region covers nearly 30 per cent of the earth's land area and contains some of the biodiversity which is being lost at an alarming rate, it said.

Director general of ICRISAT Dr William Dar, addressing an international symposium organised recently by Asia-Pacific Association of Agricultural Research Institutions (APPARI) in Suwon, South Korea with focus on conserving agro-biodiversity, recalled how earlier generations selected certain crop varieties for their special taste, appearance, easy cooking and storage, which attracted higher market prices.

"Sadly, many of these land races have vanished and with them their nutritional benefits and their adaptation traits that could have helped a world facing climate change.

"The knowledge that farmers accumulated over generations about the special traits of each land races, is lost," Dar said.

About half of the world's economy and 80 per cent of the needs of the poor are derived from biological resources, he said.

Advocating for on-site use and conservation of agro-biodiversity by farmers to complement genebanks, Dar emphasised the need to help farmers in accessing markets for them to earn money from this diversity, thereby creating a sustainable mechanism for its conservation for posterity.

This, he stated, is the focus of ICRISAT's new strategic plan for the next decade, called "inclusive market-oriented development."

Harnessing the resilience of the poor, ICRISAT's new strategy focuses on increasing the productivity of staple food crops and converting farm deficits into surpluses for the market. As household food security is achieved, market linkages are expanded to further raise incomes through high-value crops and other income-boosting products.

Nevertheless, Dar mentioned, there are still pockets of diversity that have improved human well-being- the spices and tea grown in Kerala (India), Sri Lanka and the Himalayan foothills for global export, vegetable gardens in rice rotations in East Asia and the rice and unique fruit tree resources grown across Asia's tropical latitudes.

"Use it so that we do not lose it," was his main message that the agro-diversity symposium, attended by about 100 senior scientists and policy-makers from the Asia-Pacific region.

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