Peasants in southern Mexico organize and create seed banks to defend corn from climate and GMOs

Published 2023년 10월 2일

Tridge summary

Indigenous farmers in Oaxaca, Mexico are creating seed banks to protect traditional corn varieties from the impact of the climate crisis. The farmers are facing a lack of rainfall, leading to a decrease in harvests. The National Institute of Forestry, Agricultural, and Livestock Research is supporting the creation of these seed banks, which safeguard the best and most suitable seeds to cope with the effects of the climate crisis.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Oaxaca (Mexico), Oct 2 (EFE).- Indigenous farmers from southern Mexico organize and create seed banks to defend traditional corn from the climate crisis, in the midst of the Mexican Government's fight against genetically modified grains, which come from mainly from the United States. In Oaxaca, in southern Mexico, Bernardino Cruz, 48 years old, planted two hectares of corn when the rainy season began, which predicted a good harvest, but for a month the rainfall has stopped. For this reason, he changed his sowing method from rainfed to irrigation so as not to lose the production of corn from the native species “belatove”, an ear about 10 centimeters long composed of mostly white grains. Half of this harvest is allocated for self-consumption and the rest for local sale in Santa Ana Zegache, an indigenous Zapotec municipality in the central region of Oaxaca, where more than 1,200 producers dedicated to corn, beans and squash subsist. "Without corn there is no life because it is what ...

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