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Farming and the Fate of Wild Nature:
Essays in Conservation-Based Agriculture
Introduction
A good farm must be one where the native flora and fauna have lost
acreage without losing their existence. —Aldo Leopold
We have collected, mulled over, and carefully considered the following
essays over a three-year period and chosen them to provide the scientific,
philosophical, economic, and cultural underpinnings for an emerging movement,
conservation-based agriculture. A number of the essays also influenced
a previous book, Farming with the Wild, a project that inspired a continental
journey in pursuit of two questions. How much wildnesss can a farm or
ranching operation support and still remain economically viable? And how
much agriculture can take place in an area and still support optimal levels
of biodiversity? The Wild Farm Alliance, the co-producer of this and the
earlier book, has been engaged in these questions for nearly a decade
and continues to be a leading voice for the re-integration of wildness
in farming and ranching regions.
Our world is rapidly changing, and the actions we take today will have
far-flung consequences. Many alarming trends cumulatively point to inevitable
shifts in agriculture in the years ahead: Changing climate patterns. Limited
cheap fossil fuels. Rapid urbanization and rising rates of industrial
consumption. Approaching shortages of clean water. The collapse of critical
ecosystems overburdened by industrial wastes. The irreparable loss of
species, and with them, the planet’s evolutionary legacy as well
as the genetic resilience to overcome pest outbreaks and other hardships.
The pages ahead will reveal a broad platform of conservation- based solutions
to many of these challenges.
Industrial agriculture has played an important, if not a leading, role
in many of the problems listed above. Forty years ago, the pioneers of
our contemporary organic farming movement set out to change that course
with a vision for “sustainable agriculture.” Throughout four
decades of hard work, organic farmers have become extremely successful
at growing crops and raising livestock without the toxic chemicals deemed
necessary for today’s industrial factory-based agriculture. In some
areas of the country, many organic farmers and advocates have emerged
as leaders in the conservation-based agriculture movement. But as a whole,
the organic movement has fallen short of deep reforms because it failed
to adequately address the interconnections between farms, ranches, and
the landscapes that support them.
One hears, for example, a great deal about “biodiversity”
in conversations about sustainable agriculture. This can refer positively
to the protection of soil organisms, such as earthworms or mycorrhyzal
fungi, both beneficial to farmers. Or it can refer negatively to the devastating
loss of traditional crop diversity, in terms of the dwindling numbers,
varieties, and breeds of plant and animal species grown and collected
for human uses. It is far less often, however, that we hear about “wild
biodiversity” in dialogues about sustainable agriculture. By this,
we mean the healthy habitats needed to support a wide range of native
flora and fauna where agriculture takes place.
This is understandable. Agriculture, after all, involves the domestication
of the wild. Over the past three centuries, native habitats—from
river valleys and grasslands, to wetlands, uplands, and woodlands—have
been converted to agricultural lands. In the industrial economy, agricultural
operations have reduced complex landscapes into zones of intensive production
for just a handful of exotic crops or, more often, a single monoculture
encompassing thousands of acres or feedlot “gulags” housing
tens of thousands of animals. In order to compete in global markets, to
pay for expensive machinery and inputs, to overcompensate for rising production
costs and declining crop prices, or simply to create “clean farms”
void of weeds, ever-larger swaths of habitats have been erased. With the
clearing of habitat comes the loss of species. And wild biodiversity is
pushed farther and farther into isolated pockets on the landscape.
This expansion—primarily to support the grain-fed confinement livestock
industry—has sent shock waves across the landscape. As much as two-thirds
of all public, private, and tribal lands are now used for agriculture,
either in grazing, haying, or row cropping. Half of the wetlands in the
continental United States have been lost in the past century. Human activities
consume an estimated 40 percent of the earth’s daily photosynthetic
output, while agriculture uses two-thirds of the earth’s available
fresh water supplies. According to Defenders of Wildlife, as of 1995,
84 percent of all threatened and endangered plant and animal species in
the United States were listed at least partially as a result of agricultural
activities. The situation is not that different in other regions of the
world.
It is also understandable that the conservation community—even the
sustainable agriculture community—has sometimes kept its distance
from mainstream agriculture. Yet, ironically perhaps, conservationists,
restorationists, and all other citizens concerned about wild biodiversity
have little choice but to engage agriculture for solutions to common concerns.
The fragmented landscape requires that our existing wild areas (no more
than 10 percent of the land base) somehow be reconnected through healthy
watersheds and diverse habitat linkages. (A juvenile male mountain lion
must safely cross hundreds of miles of territory to become an independent
adult; a salmon must find the watershed of its birth to spawn and complete
its noble cycle of life.) Many of these linkages and migrations must take
place on privately held farms and ranches. Unfortunately, landowners cannot
always easily receive compensation or technical assistance for such essential
stewardship services.
Advocates of a truly sustainable agriculture must also embrace wild biodiversity
as an essential foundation for a new farming and ranching regime, one
that works with wild nature rather than industrializing it. Indeed, as
shown in many of the essays that follow, some people are already working
to combine agriculture and conservation in extraordinary ways.
While the authors of this book may not necessarily agree on approaches
and outlook, or on how to achieve a balance between agriculture and conservation
goals, it is safe to assume that they share a common value. Healthy human
activities require healthy landscapes, and healthy landscapes require
moving away from an eradication ethic toward coexistence with all species.
The fate of wild nature will no doubt be deeply intertwined with the food
and farming systems of our present and future. But this is a codependent
journey. There will be no agriculture within completely degraded habitats.
These essays show us that we still know so little about the potential
of working with wild nature in highly productive ways. But this is not
a call to convert the earth into a “working landscape.” Wilderness
must continue to be protected for its own sake, as well as to guide and
inspire us. The broad concepts of conservation-based agriculture are ours
for the taking: A grass farming revolution to replace the corn-soybean-feedlot
juggernaut. A continental effort to restore habitat for native pollinators,
wide-ranging predators, and vital watersheds. The preservation of migratory
salmon populations. Vital farming and ranching regions in which native
species may lose acreage without losing existence. These are ideas that
just might save us.
—Dan Imhoff and Jo Ann Baumgartner
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