Taylor Hicklen

About   Twitter   Questions? Comments?    Ask me anything   

Aspiring author. College student. Probably a total lunatic.

June 28, 2011 at 5:35pm
Home
Reblogged from plantedcity
plantedcity:

Infographic: ‘Our Dwindling Food Variety’
From National Geographic:

As we’ve come to depend on a handful of commercial varieties of fruits and vegetables, thousands of heirloom varieties have disappeared. It’s hard to know exactly how many have been lost over the past century, but a study conducted in 1983 by the Rural Advancement Foundation International gave a clue to the scope of the problem. It compared USDA listings of seed varieties sold by commercial U.S. seed houses in 1903 with those in the U.S. National Seed Storage Laboratory in 1983. The survey, which included 66 crops, found that about 93 percent of the varieties had gone extinct. More up-to-date studies are needed.

The infographic accompanies the feature article ‘Food Ark’, which looks at efforts to protect and enhance the global food supply. Also included with the article are sections on some amazing ‘Seeds Worth Saving’ and how to ‘Grow Your Own Heirlooms’.

Whether this is the byproduct of common agricultural practices or an increasingly demanding industry is anyone’s guess, but this still hits home.

plantedcity:

Infographic: ‘Our Dwindling Food Variety’

From National Geographic:

As we’ve come to depend on a handful of commercial varieties of fruits and vegetables, thousands of heirloom varieties have disappeared. It’s hard to know exactly how many have been lost over the past century, but a study conducted in 1983 by the Rural Advancement Foundation International gave a clue to the scope of the problem. It compared USDA listings of seed varieties sold by commercial U.S. seed houses in 1903 with those in the U.S. National Seed Storage Laboratory in 1983. The survey, which included 66 crops, found that about 93 percent of the varieties had gone extinct. More up-to-date studies are needed.

The infographic accompanies the feature article ‘Food Ark’, which looks at efforts to protect and enhance the global food supply. Also included with the article are sections on some amazing ‘Seeds Worth Saving’ and how to ‘Grow Your Own Heirlooms’.

Whether this is the byproduct of common agricultural practices or an increasingly demanding industry is anyone’s guess, but this still hits home.

(via absurdlakefront)

Notes

  1. fotistikaorofhs reblogged this from poptech
  2. pushthebigredbutton reblogged this from evelark
  3. evelark reblogged this from sunshineandbones
  4. sunshineandbones reblogged this from robot-heart-politics
  5. prowthish-istoselidon reblogged this from poptech
  6. optikakatasthma reblogged this from poptech
  7. tourstrikerstriker reblogged this from plantedcity
  8. palmspringsarchitects reblogged this from plantedcity
  9. thegreenenergycompany reblogged this from plantedcity
  10. la-crawfish reblogged this from plantedcity
  11. somestrangeseahorse reblogged this from plantedcity
  12. designdrift reblogged this from plantedcity
  13. real-time-news reblogged this from plantedcity
  14. so-treu reblogged this from nihilismfornegroes
  15. chefduquartier reblogged this from plantedcity
  16. nihilismfornegroes reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine
  17. mindlessmusingss reblogged this from missterclean
  18. missterclean reblogged this from robot-heart-politics and added:
    As a foodie and general enthusiast of preserving the tastiness and accessibility of food everywhere, this is something...
  19. iamtheporpoise reblogged this from kungfucarrie
  20. apiaceae reblogged this from brontomerus
  21. brontomerus reblogged this from curiositycounts
  22. infographicgeek reblogged this from plantedcity
  23. prodessequamconspici reblogged this from poptech
  24. kissingunderspiderwebs reblogged this from theanonymoushippie
  25. mikroblogolas reblogged this from zuky and added:
    The industrialization of and monopoly on food production…
  26. ihavethatshirt reblogged this from annibannanni
  27. annibannanni reblogged this from robot-heart-politics
  28. hydrolicious reblogged this from dmontron
  29. digitalwasteland reblogged this from offwithitshead
  30. compilt reblogged this from blisswheelr and added:
    fucking wow. reminded me of this http://ciclovida.org/en which everyone should really watch. i cried.