Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Fighting the Last Revolution
In this case the neolithic revolution. The neolithic revolution is the term that’s used to describe the long, slow process by which human beings abandoned wandering around and scrounging up their food (“hunting and gathering”) to staying in one place and taking a more active role in producing their food (agriculture). This process started more than 10,000 years ago and continues right down to the present day.
It probably all started something like this. Long, long ago a band of human beings happened upon a patch of melons or some other equally delectable morsel, stopping long enough to eat up all of the melons, toss the leftover seeds and rinds around, and maybe even leave some of their excrement on the site. The next year, remembering last year’s feast, the band returned to the area, hoping for a repeat. Eventually some enterprising person noticed that the more they spread the seeds around the more melons there were the next year and decided to try dispersing the seeds even farther. Maybe they even noticed that the melons prospered more where they’d left their excrement the year before so they decided to spread that around a bit, too.
They may also have started deliberately choosing the tastiest and largest melons and preferentially selecting their seeds to spread around. Other innovations might have included tilling the soil a bit to improve the likelihood of germination or putting up barriers to prevent other critters from getting in on the feast first.
If they were successful enough, they eventually decided to stay around and tend these gardens to improve their yields and protect them from competitors. First horticulture, then agriculture was born.
Nowadays most human being live from the products of agriculture but there is one major exception to this: fish. We still catch vast amounts of wild fish from the rivers, lakes, and oceans. Unlike 10,000 years ago there are innumerably more of us trying to get in on the catch and we’re tremendously better at it than we used to be. Huge factory ships ply the oceans sucking practically every living thing out of a patch of ocean, processing them right there on the ships, and moving on.
I used to think that the obvious solution to this environmental degradation was aquaculture, extending the agricultural revolution to fish and crustaceans. Then I learned how inefficient aquaculture was and that it takes between 2 and 15 pounds of wild caught protein to feed one pound of cultivated seafood. Obviously, that’s no solution. It might be someday or it may never be. It’s certainly no solution right now.
Sumber : Aquaculture News
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