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Traditional Maize Can Cope with Climate Change
Emilio Godoy
IPS, September 8 2011
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=105035

MEXICO CITY - Maize, Mexico's staple food as well as a symbol, has the potential
to adapt to climate change and mitigate its effects without any need for
genetically modified seeds, according to agricultural scientists.

Mexico has at least 59 landraces (traditional, locally-adapted strains that are
rich in biodiversity) and 209 varieties of corn. White maize is the most
commonly eaten variety, while yellow maize is used for animal feed or processed
into cornflakes, starch and other products.

Maize is thought to have developed from an ancestor grain in four possible
geographical locations in Mexico, according to the 2009 study "Origen y
diversificación del maíz, una revisión analítica" (Origin and Diversification of
Maize: An Analytical Review) by researchers at the state Autonomous National
University of Mexico (UNAM), the Autonomous University of Mexico City and the
Postgraduate College.

"Climate change will have different impacts, because corn varieties are adapted
to very specific conditions," Carolina Ureta, a researcher at the UNAM Biology
Institute, told IPS. "While some varieties will benefit, others will be harmed."


"We can focus our attention on varieties that grow in adverse conditions, and
see what genetic improvement is possible," she said.

Ureta has been working since 2009 on a research project titled "Effects of
Climate Change on the Distribution of Mexican Maize and its Wild Relatives", due
to be completed in 2012 as the final stage of her doctorate in biological
sciences. Her research is to be published in a forthcoming issue of the U.S.
journal Global Change Biology.

According to her results, the territorial distribution of maize is expected to
shrink 15 percent by 2030, and 30 percent by 2050. The north of the country will
be most affected because of its drier conditions.

Maize is a symbolic crop in Mesoamerica, the region covering southern Mexico and
Central America, because of its vital importance in pre-Columbian culture.

Some 3.2 million Mexican farmers cultivate maize, and over two million of these
producers use it for family consumption, according to official statistics.

Farm workers harvest white maize, in particular, for domestic consumption, while
they import yellow corn for animal feed. The government projects white maize
output of 23 million tonnes this year, and a further nine million tonnes of
yellow maize will be purchased abroad.

"The potential to face up to climate change lies in producing seeds in situ, the
way it has always been done in traditional environmentally-friendly
agriculture," Aleida Lara, coordinator of Greenpeace Mexico's sustainable
agriculture and transgenics campaign, told IPS.

In fact, traditional farming systems are being studied by three scientists, from
the NGO Biodiversity International, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO), and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT), whose
results were published in August in the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The results suggest that "traditional seed systems may be able to provide
farmers with landraces suitable for agro-ecological conditions under predicted
climate change scenarios," Mauricio Bellón, David Hodson and Jon Hellin
concluded in their paper titled "Assessing the vulnerability of traditional
maize seed systems in Mexico to climate change".

The scientists studied the structure and spatial scope of traditional maize seed
systems in 400 households from 20 communities in five states of eastern Mexico,
at altitudes between 10 and 2,980 metres above sea level.

In their view, given the expected changes in agriculture and climate, the
introduction of genetically modified maize (engineered to contain genes from
other species, such as bacteria, to confer resistance to insects or herbicides)
represents a threat to native species.

"We have enough diversity to be able to introduce adaptation methods without the
need for transgenics," said UNAM's Ureta, who belongs to the Union of Scientists
Committed to Society (UCCS). "Very few landraces have been genetically
characterised, and transgenics could contaminate the genotypes that have not
been produced commercially. Therefore, we should develop our own technology, to
meet our own needs," she said.

Mexico's agriculture ministry decided in March to approve a pilot study of
genetically modified yellow maize resistant to the herbicide glyphosate, carried
out by U.S. seed giant Monsanto on less than a hectare of land in the
northeastern state of Tamaulipas.

Since 2009, the government has received 110 applications for experimental
cultivation of transgenic maize and 11 for pilot programmes. The ministry has
granted 67 permits for experimental planting, on nearly 70 hectares of land in
states in the north of the country.

Environmental organisations are accusing the government of conservative
President Felipe Calderón of breaking the Biosecurity Law for Genetically
Modified Organisms, in force since 2005, which stipulates that centres of origin
of native seeds must be determined before any permission is granted for
transgenic crops.

They want the government to reinstate the moratorium on transgenics that was in
place from 1999 to March 2009.

The environmental watchdog Greenpeace reported the existence of transgenic maize
in six of Mexico's 32 states, as well as imports of genetically modified seeds.

"In 2009 we requested the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to grant
precautionary measures against the sowing of transgenic seeds, because of the
delay by the Mexican justice system in enforcing the law in an issue of national
security," said Greenpeace Mexico's Lara.

CIMMYT, founded by U.S. scientist Norman Borlaug (1914-2009), the "father" of
the Green Revolution that spread chemical fertilisers on fields all over the
world, has determined that transgenes - genetic material transferred from one
species to another - may affect the environment and farmers' welfare, and have
commercial costs, such as licences and distribution fees.

"Maize landraces in Mexico show remarkable diversity and climatic adaptability,
growing in environments ranging from arid to humid and from temperate to very
hot. This diversity raises the possibility that Mexico already has maize
germplasm suitable for the 'novel' crop environments predicted for 2050," says
the paper by Bellón, Hodson, and Hellin, who works at CIMMYT.

CIMMYT maintains a germplasm bank containing at least 25,000 maize seeds, while
Mexico's National Institute of Forestry, Agricultural and Livestock Research
(INIFAP) runs a similar bank of 11,000 seeds. But these stored seeds may not be
fully suited to future climate conditions.

National Maize Day will be celebrated in Mexico Sept. 29, organised by the "Sin
Maíz No Hay País" (Without Corn There is No Country) campaign undertaken by a
coalition of NGOs to protect native maize from genetically modified seeds.

The Genetic Engineering Blog is produced by Thomas Wittman and EcoFarm, and supported by a generous donation from the Newman's Own Foundation.

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