Are forgotten Crops the Future of Food?
A) On a small fruit farm near the Straits of Malacca, Lim Kok Ann is down to just one tree growing kedondong, a crunchy, sour berry that Malaysians mostly use in pickles(腌菜)and salads. "It's not very well-known," says the 45-year-old, who is instead focusing on longan(龙眼)berries and pineapples, which have bigger markets. "We have to grow what is profitable," he says.
B) But less than an hour away in the Malaysian countryside, inside three giant, silver domes, scientists are trying to change the future of food. They' re pushing the boundaries of what humans eat by growing and processing so-called "alternative" crops——such as kedondong. At the headquarters of global research centre Crops For the Future (CFF) this particular under-used fruit has been turned into a sugar-free juice, high in vitamin C and getting top marks in sensory evaluations. "Anything you see here is a forgotten crop," says Sayed Azam-Ali of the abundant plants weaving through the gardens of CFF outside Malaysia's capital Kuala Lumpur.
C) Prof Azam-Ali explains that just four crops——wheat, maize, rice and soybean——provide two-thirds of the world's food supply. "We' re dependent on these four," he says. "But actually there' re 7,000 crops we' ve been farming for thousands of years. We ignore all of those." Researchers are trying to unlock the potential of these ignored crops——plants they describe as forgotten, under-used or"alternative" as they are displaced by increasingly uniform diets fuelled by processed ingredients from the major crops.
D) It's a timely quest. The food sector is already responsible for nearly a third of global greenhouse gas emissions. By 2050 it estimates the world must produce 50% more food to feed the projected global population of 10 billion. Meeting this demand without contributing to climate change calls for urgent solutions.
E) Forgotten crops hold key answers. By investing in neglected local plants, countries can reduce their reliance on imported crops and their carbon-heavy supply chains. Bringing back the variety of crops humans once ate also boosts food security at a time warming climates threaten existing crops. On top of that forgotten crops are among the most climate-resilient(具有气候韧性的)and nutritious, argues Azam-Ali. His summary is plain:"Dietary diversification is critical to the future of humanity."
F) Food security experts agree. "There is no food insecurity in the world, there is food ignorance," says Cecilia Tortajada, a senior research fellow at the Institute of Water policy at the National university of Singapore. "Whenever we have native crops we tend to disregard them as if they were not valuable but they are," she adds.
G) Azam-Ali knows that scepticism firsthand. He came across alternative crops in the 1980s through the work of women farmers he met in Niger. The then-PhD student remembers marvelling at the crops they grew in their backyards, without the benefits of technology, to feed their families when the big crops failed. He saw a tremendous opportunity to build alternative food systems. But"the resistance was enormous," he recalls.
H) Undeterred, he ploughed on. project after project helped prove these crops were viable in different environments as alternatives to the staple ones. But the question of whether these crops would be marketable remained. "That's the critical thing," he says. In one of the centre's domes, food technologist Tan Xinlin uses powdered moringa(辣木)leaves in place of some wheat flour to bake a cake lower in gluten(谷胶)and higher in nutrients. Tan's job is to create recipes with these still unfamiliar ingredients that will appeal to both local and international tastes. In recent years she has used some of the forgotten crops grown at CFF, such as moringa and bambara groundnut, to make everything from instant soup to Indian snacks. "I try to modernise forgotten crops instead of using old recipes." says Tan, who is also a trained chef. It's a strategy to appeal to the world's growing middle classes who are increasingly turning to the fast and processed food industries. It's also a way to help counter perceptions of local crops as"old or poor people' s food" or as inferior"women' s crops", adds Tan.
I) The roots of these connotations about local foods can run deep. The bambara groundnut, a protein-rich native crop of sub-Saharan Africa that is also grown in parts of southeast Asia, can trace its marginalisation to colonial rule. "African women who grew bambara groundnut were actually punished for growing it," says Azam-Ali. "Colonial powers said you can't grow that because there's no oil. We can't get a market for it." But today the bambara murukku is one of CFF's best reviewed foods and they are aiming to get it into grocery stores, pointing to the success of crops like quinoa to potential investors. Some 30 years ago, quinoa was virtually unheard of outside its native mountains in Bolivia and Peru. Today the nutritious grain is found on the menus of lavish restaurants across the world.
J) Measuring crops by nutrition instead of yield is at the heart of the forgotten foods enterprise. Ever since the"green revolution" of the 1960s, high-yielding crops have dominated modern agriculture.That was in part a crucial response to devastating famines at a time when the world needed to increase its food supply. Today"nutrition is becoming a time bomb", says Azam-Ali, as growing carbon dioxide levels strip crops of their minerals. Instead of bio-fortifying major crops we should be investing in those forgotten crops that are already more nutritious, he asserts.
K) In the bowels of CFF's third dome, lab manager Gomathy Sethuraman opens a window into the centre' s"crown jewels", revealing vines of winged beans growing under a bright yellow light. It' s one of multiple chambers where scientists are studying the impact of higher temperatures and carbon dioxide levels on the nutritional make-up of alternative crops. This research is"the game changer",says Azam-Ali, ensuring that"future crops" are also the healthiest ones in warmer climates.
L) There is a growing global momentum around forgotten foods, says Danielle Nierenberg, president of Food Tank, a US-based think tank. Other than CFF, which bills itself as the world's first research centre dedicated solely to under-utilised crops, there are other key groups championing agricultural diversity including Crop Trust, Slow Food, Icrisat and Bioversity International. add to that more middle-income consumers searching for nutritious foods and others eager to try the unprocessed foods their grandparents once ate, she says.
M) But the rising interest in forgotten foods in some quarters is overtaken by the global spread of Western-style diets heavy in sugar, fat and processed foods in others.
N) A key obstacle to promoting fading local crops in Malaysia, for example, is"the obsession with imported products", says Jenifer Kuah, co-founder of a restaurant that champions locally-sourced food in an affluent suburb of Kuala Lumpur. Customers at Sitka, regarded as a pioneer in the country's small farm-to-table dining scene, still seek foreign ingredients as a"status symbol", she says.
O) The argument for forgotten foods feels intuitive. Some analysts say it is in fact inevitable. "Climate change is going to mean almost certainly tastes are going to be forced to change," says Tim Lang,professor of food policy at City, University of London. We"have to get used to eating other crops" as yields of staple crops fall, he says.
36. according to a senior researcher, we will have secure food supply if we rid ourselves of ignorance about native crops.
37. Most of the world's food supply comes from a tiny number out of thousands of crops that have been grown for centuries.
38. To provide their family with food when the staple crops failed, some African women farmers grew local crops in their backyards.
39. High-yielding crops have occupied a dominant position in modern agriculture since the green revolution in the last century.
40. Growing alternative crops proved feasible in a variety of environments, but the critical question was whether they would be marketable.
41. According to a professor, when the yields of staple crops fall, we will have to adapt to eating foods from alternative crops.
42. Urgent measures have to be taken to provide food for the projected world population without aggravating the climate.
43. Colonial rule marginalised local crops by punishing Africans who grew them.
44. As existing crops are endangered by global warming, we can increase food security by bringing back the many forgotten food crops.
45. Researchers are trying to find out how higher temperatures and CO₂ levels affect the nutritional composition of alternative crops.
答案解析:
36. 由题干中的关键词 senior researcher 和 ignorance about native crops (对本土作物的无知) 定位到 F段。F段提到,"There is no food insecurity in the world, there is food ignorance," says Cecilia Tortajada... "Whenever we have native crops we tend to disregard them... but they are" (世界上没有粮食不安全,只有对粮食的无知……每当我们有本土作物时,我们倾向于忽视它们……但它们是有价值的),所以选 F。
37. 由题干中的关键词 world's food supply 和 thousands of crops 定位到 C段。C段提到,just four crops——wheat, maize, rice and soybean——provide two-thirds of the world's food supply. "But actually there' re 7,000 crops we' ve been farming for thousands of years." (仅仅四种作物……提供了世界三分之二的食物供应。“但实际上,我们有7000种我们已经种植了数千年的作物。”),所以选 C。
38. 由题干中的关键词 African women farmers 和 backyards 定位到 G段。G段提到,He came across alternative crops... through the work of women farmers he met in Niger. The then-PhD student remembers marvelling at the crops they grew in their backyards... to feed their families when the big crops failed (他通过在尼日尔遇到的女农民的工作接触到了替代作物……这位当时的博士生记得对他们在后院种植的作物感到惊叹……当主要作物歉收时,这些作物用来养活他们的家庭),所以选 G。
39. 由题干中的关键词 High-yielding crops 和 green revolution (绿色革命) 定位到 J段。J段提到,Ever since the"green revolution" of the 1960s, high-yielding crops have dominated modern agriculture (自20世纪60年代的“绿色革命”以来,高产作物主导了现代农业),所以选 J。
40. 由题干中的关键词 feasible (可行的) 和 marketable (有销路的) 定位到 H段。H段提到,Project after project helped prove these crops were viable in different environments... But the question of whether these crops would be marketable remained. "That's the critical thing," he says (一个又一个项目帮助证明了这些作物在不同环境中是可行的……但这些作物是否有市场的问题仍然存在。“这是关键,”他说),所以选 H。
41. 由题干中的关键词 professor 和 yields of staple crops fall (主要作物产量下降) 定位到 O段。O段提到,"Climate change is going to mean almost certainly tastes are going to be forced to change," says Tim Lang... We"have to get used to eating other crops" as yields of staple crops fall (“气候变化几乎肯定意味着口味将被迫改变,”蒂姆·朗说……随着主要作物产量的下降,我们“必须习惯于吃其他作物”),所以选 O。
42. 由题干中的关键词 Urgent measures (紧急措施) 和 projected world population (预计的世界人口) 定位到 D段。D段提到,By 2050 it estimates the world must produce 50% more food to feed the projected global population of 10 billion. Meeting this demand without contributing to climate change calls for urgent solutions (到2050年,据估计世界必须多生产50%的食物来养活预计100亿的全球人口。在不加剧气候变化的情况下满足这一需求,需要紧急的解决方案),所以选 D。
43. 由题干中的关键词 Colonial rule (殖民统治) 和 punishing Africans 定位到 I段。I段提到,The bambara groundnut... can trace its marginalisation to colonial rule. "African women who grew bambara groundnut were actually punished for growing it," says Azam-Ali (班巴拉花生……其边缘化可以追溯到殖民统治时期。“种植班巴拉花生的非洲女性实际上因此受到惩罚,”阿扎姆-阿里说),所以选 I。
44. 由题干中的关键词 global warming 和 increase food security (增加粮食安全) 定位到 E段。E段提到,Bringing back the variety of crops humans once ate also boosts food security at a time warming climates threaten existing crops (在气候变暖威胁现有作物之际,恢复人类曾经食用的多种作物也能提高粮食安全),所以选 E。
45. 由题干中的关键词 higher temperatures and CO₂ levels 和 nutritional composition (营养成分) 定位到 K段。K段提到,It' s one of multiple chambers where scientists are studying the impact of higher temperatures and carbon dioxide levels on the nutritional make-up of alternative crops (这是多个实验室之一,科学家们正在研究更高的温度和二氧化碳水平对替代作物营养成分的影响),所以选 K。
