Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Domesticating the Undomesticated for Global Food and Nutritional Security: Four Steps
View through CrossRef
Ensuring the food and nutritional demand of the ever-growing human population is a major sustainability challenge for humanity in this Anthropocene. The cultivation of climate resilient, adaptive and underutilized wild crops along with modern crop varieties is proposed as an innovative strategy for managing future agricultural production under the changing environmental conditions. Such underutilized and neglected wild crops have been recently projected by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations as ‘future smart crops’ as they are not only hardy, and resilient to changing climatic conditions, but also rich in nutrients. They need only minimal care and input, and therefore, they can be easily grown in degraded and nutrient-poor soil also. Moreover, they can be used for improving the adaptive traits of modern crops. The contribution of such neglected, and underutilized crops and their wild relatives to global food production is estimated to be around 115–120 billion US$ per annum. Therefore, the exploitation of such lesser utilized and yet to be used wild crops is highly significant for climate resilient agriculture and thereby providing a good quality of life to one and all. Here we provide four steps, namely: (i) exploring the unexplored, (ii) refining the unrefined traits, (iii) cultivating the uncultivated, and (iv) popularizing the unpopular for the sustainable utilization of such wild crops as a resilient strategy for ensuring food and nutritional security and also urge the timely adoption of suitable frameworks for the large-scale exploitation of such wild species for achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Title: Domesticating the Undomesticated for Global Food and Nutritional Security: Four Steps
Description:
Ensuring the food and nutritional demand of the ever-growing human population is a major sustainability challenge for humanity in this Anthropocene.
The cultivation of climate resilient, adaptive and underutilized wild crops along with modern crop varieties is proposed as an innovative strategy for managing future agricultural production under the changing environmental conditions.
Such underutilized and neglected wild crops have been recently projected by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations as ‘future smart crops’ as they are not only hardy, and resilient to changing climatic conditions, but also rich in nutrients.
They need only minimal care and input, and therefore, they can be easily grown in degraded and nutrient-poor soil also.
Moreover, they can be used for improving the adaptive traits of modern crops.
The contribution of such neglected, and underutilized crops and their wild relatives to global food production is estimated to be around 115–120 billion US$ per annum.
Therefore, the exploitation of such lesser utilized and yet to be used wild crops is highly significant for climate resilient agriculture and thereby providing a good quality of life to one and all.
Here we provide four steps, namely: (i) exploring the unexplored, (ii) refining the unrefined traits, (iii) cultivating the uncultivated, and (iv) popularizing the unpopular for the sustainable utilization of such wild crops as a resilient strategy for ensuring food and nutritional security and also urge the timely adoption of suitable frameworks for the large-scale exploitation of such wild species for achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Related Results
Cash‐based approaches in humanitarian emergencies: a systematic review
Cash‐based approaches in humanitarian emergencies: a systematic review
This Campbell systematic review examines the effectiveness, efficiency and implementation of cash transfers in humanitarian settings. The review summarises evidence from five studi...
British Food Journal Volume 53 Issue 9 1951
British Food Journal Volume 53 Issue 9 1951
In a recent edition of the Ministry's Bulletin, Mr. F. T. Willey, M.P., Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food, urged that the utmost effort should be made by local author...
ДОСЛІДЖЕННЯ СТАНУ ГЛОБАЛЬНОЇ ПРОДОВОЛЬЧОЇ БЕЗПЕКИ
ДОСЛІДЖЕННЯ СТАНУ ГЛОБАЛЬНОЇ ПРОДОВОЛЬЧОЇ БЕЗПЕКИ
The article is devoted to the study of the state of the global food problem. Today, one of the most important and urgent global problems of humanity is food security, as the popula...
Sustainable Development: Strengthening of Food Security in EU Countries
Sustainable Development: Strengthening of Food Security in EU Countries
The issue of food security is relevant for all countries, but it does not have a universal solution. In particular, this is confirmed by the countries of the European Union, which,...
Household food insecurity in the UK: data and research landscape
Household food insecurity in the UK: data and research landscape
Household food insecurity is a widely used concept in high-income countries to describe “uncertainty about future food availability and access, insufficiency in the amount and kind...
British Food Journal Volume 43 Issue 3 1941
British Food Journal Volume 43 Issue 3 1941
Professor J. C. Drummond concluded his Cantor Lectures in January, 1938, by a quotation from Thomas Muffett's Healths Improvement, published in 1655: “Wherefore let us neither with...
Proporsi Konsumsi Junk Food dan Status Gizi Berlebih di Mahasiswa Kedokteran
Proporsi Konsumsi Junk Food dan Status Gizi Berlebih di Mahasiswa Kedokteran
Abstract. Overnutrition status in Indonesia has increased, from 14.8% (2013) to 21.8% (2018). The cause of excess nutritional status is an excessive intake of junk food. Current te...
Modelling internet of things driven sustainable food security system
Modelling internet of things driven sustainable food security system
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to model the sustainable food security system using various technologies driving internet of things (IoT). The right to food is a fundamental ri...

