Greater food security in the Peruvian Andes will be the focus of a University of British Columbia-Peruvian study, thanks to a $3.4 million investment from Canadian development agencies.
The 42-month initiative will work with smallholder farmers and indigenous people in two regions of the Peruvian Andes known for their biodiversity and active farmers’ associations. The aim is to increase food security by improving sustainable, organic agriculture, focusing on staple crops such as potatoes and small Andean tuber crops.
The research team comprises UBC Faculty of Land and Food Systems Profs. Andrew Riseman, Eduardo Jovel, and Judy McLean, along with Manuel Ruiz of the Sociedad Peruana de Derecho Ambiental, and Roberto Ugás, of the Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina.
The research is funded by the Canadian International Food Security Research Fund (CIFSRF), a collaborative program between Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA).
The project aims to increase the effectiveness of organic farming in two regions of the Peruvian Andes (Cusco and Cajamarca) known for their high biodiversity and active farmers’ associations. Research will also focus on social processes, including innovation, traditional knowledge, and links between organizations, policy, and advocacy.
“Our goal is to enhance local farmers’ knowledge, innovations and practices regarding native crop management, improvement and selection to increase yields,” says Professor Riseman.
To foster intensive and integrated farming, the researchers will explore participatory plant breeding, assessing the genetic diversity and sustainability of current and potential crops, particularly indigenous ones.
“The contributions of indigenous people to agriculture remain crucial to the future of food security in the region,” says Professor Jovel, head of the UBC Aboriginal Health and Natural Products Chemistry Lab. Jovel, an ethnobotanist and Indigenous Pipil from El Salvador, adds, “The Andean region is a repository of traditional knowledge and an asset for the development of sustainable strategies for farmers.”
The research team will help farmers build on organic certification systems run by local networks, which will promote the integration of traditional knowledge, innovation and intellectual property issues, including patents and plant breeders’ rights.
The interdisciplinary study will examine organizational links, gender, policy, advocacy, access to markets for organic produce, and issues such as guaranteed minimum earnings in the region. On average, Andean famers earn about CDN$300 a year.
Sophisticated Andean agricultural practices have, over millennia, domesticated species of edible plants and fruits, contributing crops that make up one third of the foods we eat today, among them potato, corn, beans, peppers and tomato. In recent decades, there has been a major decline in agriculture due to Andean migration to coastal cities. The region’s delicate ecosystems have also been impacted by population growth, deforestation, soil erosion, resource mismanagement and natural disasters.
The initiative aims to improve nutrition among the Andean population through production of under-utilized crops that include the grain amaranth and physalis, a fruit related to the tomatillo. Many under-utilized Andean crops are little known outside the regions and are quickly disappearing because of social unrest and environmental damage.
Through investments in applied and interdisciplinary research, the CIFSRF contributes to the development of more productive and sustainable agricultural techniques for women smallholder farmers, with the ultimate goal of making food sources more secure and the food produced more nutritious for poor people in developing countries.
For more details, please see the project’s press release (pdf document).