An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals

Revival of agrobiodiversity is a lynchpin for climate resilience, improved human nutrition, local economies, and cultural diversity. Following decades of decline in traditional cereals, the highest policy levels in India are promoting their revival. The revival is potentially as transformative for a...

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Main Authors: Ruth DeFries, E. D. I. Oliver King, Mansi Monga, Harini Nagendra, Amrita Neelakantan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2025.1592723/full
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author Ruth DeFries
Ruth DeFries
E. D. I. Oliver King
Mansi Monga
Harini Nagendra
Amrita Neelakantan
author_facet Ruth DeFries
Ruth DeFries
E. D. I. Oliver King
Mansi Monga
Harini Nagendra
Amrita Neelakantan
author_sort Ruth DeFries
collection DOAJ
description Revival of agrobiodiversity is a lynchpin for climate resilience, improved human nutrition, local economies, and cultural diversity. Following decades of decline in traditional cereals, the highest policy levels in India are promoting their revival. The revival is potentially as transformative for agriculture and diets as the Green Revolution that promoted high-yielding rice and wheat in the early 1960s and serves as a model for other places where traditional cereals are in decline. While the Green Revolution successfully increased cereal production and self-sufficiency, in hindsight critics have identified several environmental, social, and nutritional shortcomings. Efforts to revive millets can learn from these shortcomings with ground-level, systematic data collection using an adaptive management approach. Based on our observations from over 2,000 households surveys in the central Indian Highlands, we propose three principles to guide the collection of evidence for an ecologically-, nutritionally-, and socially-secure revival: (1) maintain diversity of millet species and varieties to preserve genetic resources in a rapidly changing climate; (2) ensure equitable access to technology, inputs, information and markets for all farmers; and (3) enable farmers to balance the trade-off between income from selling and nutritional benefits from consuming millets. The case study, which indicates the need for technologies to reduce drudgery from processing and attention to the income-nutrition trade-off for the poorest segments of the population, illustrates that ground-level data is needed to link high-level policy goals with field realities.
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spelling doaj-art-c40b8f609e5b4f26b407e77b55d50e3a2025-08-20T05:32:35ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems2571-581X2025-08-01910.3389/fsufs.2025.15927231592723An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cerealsRuth DeFries0Ruth DeFries1E. D. I. Oliver King2Mansi Monga3Harini Nagendra4Amrita Neelakantan5Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Environmental Biology, New York, NY, United StatesClimate School, Columbia University, New York, NY, United StatesM. S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, Chennai, IndiaNetwork for Conserving Central India, Mocha, IndiaSchool of Climate Change and Sustainability, Azim Premji University, Bengaluru, IndiaNetwork for Conserving Central India, Mocha, IndiaRevival of agrobiodiversity is a lynchpin for climate resilience, improved human nutrition, local economies, and cultural diversity. Following decades of decline in traditional cereals, the highest policy levels in India are promoting their revival. The revival is potentially as transformative for agriculture and diets as the Green Revolution that promoted high-yielding rice and wheat in the early 1960s and serves as a model for other places where traditional cereals are in decline. While the Green Revolution successfully increased cereal production and self-sufficiency, in hindsight critics have identified several environmental, social, and nutritional shortcomings. Efforts to revive millets can learn from these shortcomings with ground-level, systematic data collection using an adaptive management approach. Based on our observations from over 2,000 households surveys in the central Indian Highlands, we propose three principles to guide the collection of evidence for an ecologically-, nutritionally-, and socially-secure revival: (1) maintain diversity of millet species and varieties to preserve genetic resources in a rapidly changing climate; (2) ensure equitable access to technology, inputs, information and markets for all farmers; and (3) enable farmers to balance the trade-off between income from selling and nutritional benefits from consuming millets. The case study, which indicates the need for technologies to reduce drudgery from processing and attention to the income-nutrition trade-off for the poorest segments of the population, illustrates that ground-level data is needed to link high-level policy goals with field realities.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2025.1592723/fullmilletsIndiaorphan cropsneglected cropsrevivalCentral India
spellingShingle Ruth DeFries
Ruth DeFries
E. D. I. Oliver King
Mansi Monga
Harini Nagendra
Amrita Neelakantan
An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
millets
India
orphan crops
neglected crops
revival
Central India
title An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals
title_full An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals
title_fullStr An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals
title_full_unstemmed An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals
title_short An evidenced-based, farmer-focused revival of traditional cereals
title_sort evidenced based farmer focused revival of traditional cereals
topic millets
India
orphan crops
neglected crops
revival
Central India
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2025.1592723/full
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