future food

by praetor
for tbl
Ever wondered why Creation
allocated only 29 percent of Earth's surface to land and 79 percent
to water? Or why this huge water mass was made saline?
Tough questions; unless you
believe in Divine Wisdom and can think beyond yourself and your
progeny as far as the future of this planet is concerned. For
the seas must surely be the food basket, or the bank deposit vault
of sustenance, for generations of life forms to inhabit Earth
a long, long time from the present. Presumably, these life forms
will include the homosapiens, considering we are the most intelligent
of all life forms and hence have the greatest chance of survival
as a species. But wait! Neither the fact - highest intelligence
level, nor the inference - greatest survival prospects, is particularly
strong in its essence. For isn't it said that the intelligence
level of chimpanzees is only about 3 percent less than that of
humans? So that takes care of how 'intelligent' our intelligence
is, if you will. And then if you examine the inference, isn't
it a fact that out of all life forms on Planet Earth, humans are
perhaps the most wasteful and the most self-destructive? Like
there is no tomorrow. So would you say we have the greatest chance
of survival as a species, even a thousand years from now?
I don't know.
But we digress. The point
I was making is that the great oceans contain a stupefying diversity
of plant and animal matter that may well serve as the principal
source of food for future humans. Unless in the interim we do
to the oceans what we have done to the land. Abuse it, over-use
it, pollute it. Almost with a vengeance, as if the land was our
enemy instead of what it is - our life sustainer. The signs are
alarming. We have already started abusing the oceans too. Too
much evidence of this is available to fit into this whole publication,
leave alone this page. But how about a few quick facts?
Today, according to the United
Nations Environment Programme, more than 3.5 billion people depend
on the oceans for their primary source of food. In 20 years, this
number could double to 7 billion. In the meantime, more than 70
percent of the world's marine fisheries are already being fished
up to or beyond their sustainable limit. And as far as polluting
the oceans goes, an estimated 21 million barrels of oil run into
the oceans each year from street run-off, effluent from factories,
and from ships flushing their tanks.
So as the sustainability gurus
struggle with solutions to the burgeoning global food crisis,
let them also consider how to save the seas from wanton destruction
which is far bigger than we can imagine, already. Let us all evaluate
how much of this is being caused by business and industry and
let us raise the CSR red flag to hold the perpetrators responsible.
Today on land we have 1 percent,
yes, only one percent of the total number of animal species left
surviving from the number that had once inhabited this planet.
99 percent of species diversity has been lost, for ever.
Does anybody know what is happening in the depths of the oceans?
Or on the shores, in mangroves, in and around coral reefs? We
all know about the link between the destructive effects of natural
energy and human attrition of nature's own protective mechanisms
- for instance, the protective role mangroves play from disasters
such as tsunamis. We must take a deep and serious look at these
matters, for at the end of the day the unchecked pollution, unmitigated
devastation of aquatic eco-systems is reducing and even eliminating
food for the future inhabitants of planet Earth - among all the
other impacts we already bear witness to.
As an aside, a report from
China states that a technique has been developed to produce gigantic
sized fruits and vegetables, grown from seeds sent into space.
Pumpkins 10 times their normal size, tomatoes over a kilogram
in weight and 9-inch chillies are amongst other fruits and vegetables
being heralded as a solution to the world's food shortage.
What will they think of next?
Is this the solution for the future then? Will they turn next
to animal life, send embryos into space to produce cows the size
of elephants? Will scientists of the future apply even more advanced
versions of this technology to life in the sea, propagating sole
to be the size of whales so that no one goes hungry? Well, count
me out for one amongst the partakers of such techhy cuisine. I
still prefer my sole to fit whole onto my standard sized dinner
plate with space to spare for the sautéed veggies. Normal
sized of course!