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The effects of overgrazing near southwestern Colorado’s Rock

Creek resulted in major erosion with banks up to eight feet high

in some places. Biohabitats has conducted a feasibility study

with the Southern Ute Indian Tribe to address this problem

through a series of four projects along the creek including bank

stabilization, habitat and re-vegegation.

Sequential project phasing accommodated funding cycles and

provided opportunities to modify and improve restoration tech-

niques. These projects were dependent on successful engage-

ment and collaboration with the tribal community and volun-

teers. To ensure local cultural and environmental relevance of

the solution required modification of methods and approaches,

selection of appropriate materials and species. Work is continu-

ing to work with the Tribe’s water quality department on the res-

toration of nearby Ignacio Creek.

Source: Biohabitats,

www.biohabitats.com

Crop wild relatives – species or other taxa more or less closely re-

lated to crops, that include most of the progenitors of our domes-

ticated types – have made an extremely significant contribution to

modern agricultural production through the characteristics that

they have contributed to plant cultivars.

Over the last 100 years crop wild relatives have become increas-

ingly important as sources of useful genes. For example, they

have contributed pest and disease resistance (e.g. resistance to

late blight in potato and grassy stunt virus in rice which came

from a single accession of

Oryza nivara

found in Orissa, India)

and abiotic stress resistance. They have also increased nutri-

tional values such as protein and vitamin content. The econom-

ic returns from investment in CWR can be striking; for example,

genetic material from a tomato wild relative has allowed plant

breeders to boost the level of solids in commercial varieties by

2.4 %, which is worth USD 250 million annually to processors in

California alone (FAO, 1998).

Rock Creek and Ignacio Creek Stream Restoration, La Plata County,

Colorado, USA

Enhancing sustainability through the use of crop wild relatives

The natural populations of many crop wild relatives are increasingly

at risk. They are threatened primarily by habitat loss, degradation

and fragmentation. Moreover, the increasing industrialization of

agriculture is reducing populations of crop wild relatives in and

around farms. They are often missed by conservation programmes,

falling between the efforts of agricultural and environmental con-

servation actions. A major global effort, coordinated by Bioversity

International and supported by UNEP GEF to find ways of secur-

ing the improved conservation of crop wild relatives is in progress

in 5 countries (Armenia, Bolivia, Madagascar, Sri Lanka and Uz-

bekistan) in collaboration with a number of international agencies

(FAO, UNEP-WCMC, IUCN, Botanic Gardens Conservation Inter-

national – BGCI). Restoring wild crop relatives and using them in

restoration has sofar received little attention, but may be crucial in

order to meet future food insecurity in a changing environment.

FAO, 1998. The State of the World’s Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agri-

culture. FAO, Rome. (Adopted fromUNEP, 2009: The environmental food crisis).

CASE STUDY #19

CASE STUDY #20