340 likes | 564 Views
A Metapopulation Approach to Farmer Seed Systems. M. Eric Van Dusen Ciriacy-Wantrup Post-Doctoral Fellow UC Berkeley. Metapopulation … a set of local populations which interact via individuals moving among populations… -Hanski and Gilpin (1991) Farmer Seed System
E N D
A Metapopulation Approach to Farmer Seed Systems M. Eric Van Dusen Ciriacy-Wantrup Post-Doctoral Fellow UC Berkeley
Metapopulation …a set of local populations which interact via individuals moving among populations… -Hanski and Gilpin (1991) Farmer Seed System …a set of farmers whose crop varieties are related through the exchange of seeds…
Seed Systems – In Situ Conservation • Move from targeting individual farmers to larger spatial scales of communities and regions • Environmental heterogeneity limits the extent of genetic erosion • landraces survive in niches • In Situ conservation is dynamic, encompassing evolutionary processes
Zoatecpan, Puebla – infra-subsistence production, small landholdings, contiguous maize plots
Seed Systems – Biosafety • Escape of transgenes in Mexico • How did it get there? • Possible Impacts and Containment • Selection Pressures, Selection Practices • Mixing with Local materials • Biosafety for future releases • How far does material travel? • Document farmer practices
Government maize supplies – hundreds of tons per week… Private Traders – 40 tons of maize direct from the US border at Laredo
Seed Systems – dissemination of improved materials • Green Revolution gains limited by low varietal turnover rates • Farmer-to-Farmer exchange fundamental to dissemination in many areas • Move towards participatory approaches, especially to reach marginal environments • Robust approaches to disaster seed relief
Participatory Breeding – new emphasis on techniques to integrate with local practices, focus on local selection behavior, target marginal conditions and marginal farmers
Evolution of Meta-population theory MacArthur and Wilson (1967) Mainland - Island Bio-geographic Model Levins (1969) Meta-Population Ecological Model
Metapopulation characteristics • Patchiness of the environment • Heterogeneity of landscape creates ecological niches, where certain species dominate • Local extinction possible • As long as there is some degree of migration, local extinction in any given patch is possible • Extinction Debt – present but declining • Genetic Rescue – add enough variability to make patch viable • Colonization of empty patches • Distance and distribution of patches matters • Successful establishment can depend on other factors
Crop meta-populations • Individual farmers manage local populations, and are linked through seed exchange and gene flow • Seeds are adapted to local agro-ecological conditions (patchiness) • Farmers experience loss of seed (local extinction), but this is mitigated through seed exchange (migration) • Varieties may compete for the same land area for in situ conservation (habitat fragmentation)
Biology matters • Self pollinated - Wheat, Rice • Exchange seed without loss of quality • Seed remains relatively pure • Geneflow less common • Open Pollinated – Maize • adapt to local conditions • high diversity within one seed lot • Geneflow through pollen
Case Study : Mexican milpa system • Survey Sample • 280 HH • 24 villages • 2 ecological zones • Social – Economic module • Seed System module
Extinction parameters(i.e. my dissertation) • Household-Farm model of activity choice • Link diversity outcomes to economic forces • Nest household, agro-ecological and market models • Major versus Minor Crops • Varieties: blue and yellow maize • Species: intercropped beans and squash • Land area, agro-ecological conditions drive maize diversity • Household characteristics, market integration, labor intensity impact secondary crop diversity
Migration parameters to derive from household data • Geneflow • Pollen • Seed sample size – drift, inbreeding, mutations • Turnover Rate • Age of Seed Lots • Loss, Change, Replacement • Exchange • Within community • Within ecological region
Field 1 Field 2 Field 3 Geneflow - Pollen Drift • Contamination decreases with distance • Field size determines level of exposure to pollen drift
Turnover Rate Age of Maize Seed Lots by type
Source of seed by type Crosstabulation: Source versus Age
Turnover Rate Age and Origin of Bean Seed
How old is a seed lot, really? Q1- How long have you had the seed you are currently planting? Q2 – When is the last time you renewed your seed? Crosstab: Age vs Renewal
Econometrics • Link seed age to socio-economic factors • Tobit: age of seed lots (censored at >25) • Nest household, farm, market conditions • Other specifications on • Logit: who holds seed forever, who replaces frequently • Duration Model – Semiparametric specs
Directions for Future Research • Build simulation model with empirical parameters • Compare across crops and regions • Build different scenarios for diffusion, conservation, genetic escape • Incorporate genetic data
Cases • Contamination - Spread of Gene into local population • Solve for Rate under a) selection b) no selection • Drift – Accumulation of Mutations - • Solve for Effective Population size / Renewal Rate • Spread of Improved Materials • Solve for rate of adoption/ diffusion
Three scales of analysisand parameters for model 1) Farmer and Field Contamination Rate Field Size [0.1-2 ha] Inflow Rate [0.001 – 0.005] Shape of Field [Square, Rectangle…] Rate of Deleterious mutations [0.001 – 0.01?] 2) Group of Farmers in Village Field Size [0.1-2 ha] New Seed renewal Rate [1-2 Farmers/Village/Yr] Seed Age Classes [0-5 yrs, 5-25 yrs, >25 yrs] Spatial Configuration [lattice, hub-spoke, non-scaling] 3) Group of Villages Rate of Exchange between villages [1-5%] Spatial Configuration [lattice, hub-spoke, non-scaling]