| Details:
The Farm as Natural Habitat: Reconnecting Food
Systems with Ecosystems
Edited by: Dana L. Jackson and Laura L. Jackson
Island Press, 2002
297 pages
|
|
|
 |
December 1,
2003: The Farm as Natural Habitat, as its editors
explain in their Introduction, “is about the connection between
the grocery list and the endangered species list” (2). While
advocates of organic agriculture may feel they have enough to do
connecting the grocery list to the farm in the minds of consumers,
and environmental groups are more inclined to point out the deleterious
effects of agriculture on wild species, the sixteen contributors
to this collection argue that to acquiesce in a geographical division
of labor between agricultural and natural areas is unnecessary and,
in the long run, disastrous.
This is very much a book of the Upper Midwest, where the sense of
living in an ‘Ecological Sacrifice Area,’ a ‘rural
industrialized zone’ given over almost entirely to the (over-)
production of two or three commodities is inescapably present, at
least for those who know anything about the conditions of modern
agriculture. There are a number of references to the “the
zone of hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico, seven thousand square miles
depleted of marine life because of excess nutrients [from chemical
fertilizers and poorly managed, concentrated animal wastes] flowing
down the Mississippi River from the Corn Belt,” and its not
surprising that under these conditions even the best farmers feel
embattled by the demands of environmentalists (17). Here wild species
must scrape by on roadside verges, railroad rights of way, the occasional
tiny patch of remnant grassland or woods, while the still-rich prairie
soils are mined for corn, soybeans, and more corn.
The editors both understand this landscape as residents and remember
what it was like to confront it as outsiders: Dana was a co-founder
of The Land Institute in Kansas and is now associate director of
the Land Stewardship Project in Minnesota; her daughter Laura is
an associate professor of biology at the University of Northern
Iowa and has clearly made a strong effort in her time there to apply
the tools of conservation biology to the local landscape in her
research and teaching. Such a perspective is sobering for those
of us living in other parts of the country, because it forces us
to realize not just how ecosystem effects pay no heed to regional
boundaries (witness that dead zone in the Gulf) but also how food
systems are just as fluid, just as irreverent. How does our trip
to the supermarket in New Jersey contribute to the conversion of
the Midwest into an ecological sacrifice area? What profound consequences
would the recreation of truly local food systems have?
This is not a handbook for on-farm ecological restoration, although
many examples are given of farming practices that can and do improve
wildlife populations or offer other ecosystem services such as stream-bank
stabilization and flood control. As a collection of essays, its
message occasionally feels disjointed—one can’t help
but wonder whether the Jacksons alone might have produced a more
powerful exposition of the issues at stake—but on the other
hand the variety of perspectives is interesting in itself. It’s
nice to see an essay on “Nature and Farming in Britain,”
outlining some of the agri-environmental policies being tried overseas,
and the editors cite the example of the Wild Farm Alliance, a coalition
of environmental activists and farming advocates founded in 2000,
as a sign that a parallel movement may be gaining ground here at
home.
Finally, this book is valuable for its reassertion of the eloquent
value of the work of Aldo Leopold, the Iowa-born wildlife biologist
whose Sand County Almanac, recounting his experiences restoring
a run-down farm in Wisconsin, has become a founding document of
conservation biology as well as a standard text for courses in environmental
literature. The Jacksons’ book features a foreword by Aldo
Leopold’s daughter Nina Leopold Bradley, essays by the executive
director of the Aldo Leopold Foundation and the son of one of Leopold’s
graduate students at the University of Wisconsin, and musings on
a few of Leopold’s many trenchant observations about the possibilities
for wild things to find homes in rural spaces.
Less well-known, perhaps, is the fact that Leopold attended Lawrenceville
School, and spent a good part of his teens tramping the fields and
woods of Mercer County, making journal entries of his findings and
writing home to his family about what he discovered. On January
9, 1904, just two days after his arrival in New Jersey, he wrote:
 |
I went north, across the country, about seven
miles, and then circled back toward the west. Here every farm
has a timber lot, sometimes fifteen or twenty acres, so it is
a fine country for birds. It is about like Iowa high prairie,
but the timber is more like the Michigan hardwood, the commonest
trees being oak, beech, ash, hickory, chestnut, red cedar, and
some elm. In some places, notably old orchards, young red cedars
cover the ground. Nearly all the undergrowth in the woods is
saplings and briars. There is little indiscriminate chopping
of timber here. |
The Farm as Natural Habitat is a fitting tribute to
Leopold’s legacy, illustrating as it does the rich potential
of even apparently drab or damaged places. Perhaps Leopold has something
to teach us about the agroecological landscape of New Jersey, too.
 |