Morgan Ruelle, M.S. 鈥10, Ph.D. 鈥15, was living in the remote mountains of Ethiopia in 2011, researching his dissertation on food diversity, when he kept hearing about a crop that confused him.
The farmers repeatedly mentioned a grain called 鈥渄uragna鈥 in Amharic that had no equivalent in English. 鈥淭hey kept saying, 鈥榃ell, it鈥檚 not really wheat, it鈥檚 not really barley,鈥欌 Ruelle says. 鈥淚 was just kind of stumped by it for several weeks.鈥
Eventually a farmer explained that duragna was actually a mix of both wheat and barley, and sometimes other grains too, planted together, rather than one type of grain sown in orderly rows.
He had stumbled upon one of the few places in the world where farmers still sow maslins, or cereal species mixtures, which can contain rice, millet, wheat, rye, barley, triticale, emmer and more.
The knowledge the farmers shared with Ruelle led to that suggests maslins, which have fed humans for millennia but now are largely forgotten, have the unique capacity to adapt in real time to increasingly unpredictable and extreme weather caused by climate change.
The research, funded by a grant from the , braids together previous work in agronomy, ethnography, archeology, history and ecology. It shows maslins 鈥 from a Latin word for 鈥渕ixed鈥 鈥 have been used for more than 3,000 years and in at least 27 countries, from northern Africa to Europe and Asia and later North America. Wild maslins may have even given rise to agriculture.
鈥淪ubsistence farmers around the world have been managing and mitigating risk on their farms for thousands and thousands of years and have developed these locally adapted strategies to do that,鈥 says former Cornell postdoctoral researcher Alex McAlvay, the paper鈥檚 first author and now a researcher at the New York Botanical Garden. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot we could learn from them, especially now, in a time of climate change.鈥
More rapid than evolution
At first, Ruelle 鈥 now an assistant professor of environmental science and policy at Clark University 鈥 thought farmers were growing maslins together, and then separating the components during the harvest 鈥 easy enough with other mixed plantings like fava beans, which grow tall, and low-growing field peas. But wheat and barley? 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 imagine them going through the field and saying, this is wheat, this is barley. That just seemed very difficult.鈥
Then he began to realize why farmers think of the mixture as a single crop. Women began telling him they use it to make bread, beer, injera 鈥 a sourdough pancake 鈥 and kollo, a popular snack of roasted cereals, legumes and oilseeds. The wheat and barley are planted together, harvested together, prepared and consumed together.
鈥淩ight away we were thinking, the proportions [of wheat and barley] must change year to year,鈥 Ruelle says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 this continuously evolving responsive entity. On its own, it鈥檚 operating outside the farmer鈥檚 control to respond to whatever conditions happen.鈥
For example, if an unusually heavy rain destroys half the plants, the plants that are still standing are well adapted to that rain event, says Anna DiPaola, a doctoral student and a co-author of the paper. 鈥淣ature is giving the farmer feedback and saying, 鈥楾his is well-adapted. Plant this again.鈥欌
And if a drought makes it a bad year for wheat, barley, which tends to be more drought resistant, will compensate and produce a better yield, Ruelle says. 鈥淪o no matter what, you鈥檙e going to be able to make bread with this.鈥
McAlvay found farmers extoling that benefit during research in the country of Georgia. On their first field trip there, in summer 2022, he talked with a priest who was growing a mixture of wheat and barley, which he uses for holy sacraments and church feasts. 鈥淗e said, 鈥業f one fails, at least we have the other.鈥 The translator used the exact same words that the translator in Ethiopia had used. I thought, 鈥榃ow, this is a phenomenon,鈥欌 McAlvay says.
The proportions in the mixtures shift from year to year, automatically adapting to the growing conditions at hand. If an area is getting increasingly drier, the wheat won鈥檛 grow as well, and the seed the farmer saves for the next planting will automatically include less wheat and more barley, McAlvay says.
鈥淚t鈥檚 more rapid than evolution. If you had just one weak variety, it would take a long time to adapt,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut if you have multiple species and multiple varieties, those shifts can happen very rapidly.鈥
That capacity makes maslins a perfect strategy for dealing with climate change 鈥 especially because they are more immediately scalable in a way that other polycultures aren鈥檛. New machinery would be needed to harvest beans and corn grown together. 鈥淏ut we鈥檝e had the technology to harvest these grains for a long time,鈥 McAlvay says.
Moreover, researchers have been encouraging farmers to adapt to future average conditions, whether warmer or drier, Ruelle says. 鈥淏ut I鈥檓 much more worried about variability in the weather increasing, and farmers having to deal with a really hot year followed by a really cool year or a late season followed by an early season,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 hear farmers in Ethiopia saying, I don鈥檛 know what to do 鈥 the weather is so unpredictable now.鈥
Maslins could help farmers thrive in a wider range of conditions, he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e raising awareness about an Indigenous system that helps farmers deal with variability.鈥
An ancient strategy
Despite having once been so widespread, the strategy of sowing maslins has flown under the radar, says disease ecologist and agroecologist , a co-author of the paper and a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, and science and technology studies, in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频. Ruelle and McAlvay were postdocs in her lab.
Power hadn鈥檛 encountered the concept until she read Ruelle鈥檚 dissertation as an adviser on his committee, even though she had been working in the field since the early 1980s. 鈥淚 said, 鈥楾hey do what?鈥欌 Power recalls. 鈥淭he most surprising thing to me was that it goes back so far and that it鈥檚 such a widespread practice that continues to this day in several parts of the world,鈥 she says. 鈥淢ost of us in the agroecology community 鈥 this was not something we were aware of.鈥
She credits Zemede Asfaw, a professor of ethnobotany at Addis Ababa University, with helping the Cornell team and others understand the practice.
Although maslins may not be well known now, they may have grown together in the wild and formed the basis of farming in the Fertile Crescent, the researchers say. There鈥檚 evidence that before domestication of these crops, people were planting mixtures of the wild versions, McAlvay says. Wild einkorn and wild emmer grow together, as do wild barley, wild rye and wild oats. 鈥淚鈥檝e talked to some Israeli scientists who said that they never find wild wheat without wild barley,鈥 McAlvay says. 鈥淭hese grains have been co-evolving for many, many thousands of years.鈥
In addition to human food, maslins have been widely used for livestock fodder; barley-oat, oat-rye and oat-wheat mixtures were planted in North America at least until 1889.
Maslins started falling out of favor starting in the 18th century 鈥 not because they didn鈥檛 work, but because of mechanization of harvesting equipment as well as scientific agriculture that encouraged farmers to plant one uniform type of cereal to produce a uniform product for the industrialized food industry.
But the practice continues today in Eritrea, India, Georgia, Greece and Ethiopia. In Sudan, farmers grow a mix of rice and sorghum in areas that flood predictably; rice grows in flooded zones and sorghum grows under drier conditions.
In addition to its climate-adaptation benefits, maslins can produce greater and more stable yields, are more tolerant of drought, and better resist pests and weeds, when compared to single crops.
That鈥檚 because multiple types of plants respond differently to stressful conditions. The plants鈥 different characteristics, such as height and root depth, and different ecological roles mean the plants grow complementarily, rather than in competition, and use light and below-ground resources more efficiently compared to single crops.
A mix of Eritrean wheat and barley outperformed sole-cropped wheat and barley by 20% and 11% respectively and yielded a higher quantity of flour per unit compared to pure barley in a field trial.
Power says many questions about maslins remain. Do maslins provide better nutrition than monocultures? Could maslin components be used to track environmental trends? How do ecological mechanisms underpin maslins鈥 performance?
鈥淲hat we鈥檇 like to do is experiments, to test the notion that these could be useful in all the ways that we propose in the paper,鈥 Power says.
Fieldwork in Ethiopia was put on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic and political conflict there.
So the team began testing their theories closer to home 鈥 on a small Cornell research farm in Freeville, New York.
Praying for aphids
Anna DiPaola pops open her laptop computer and fires up a PowerPoint presentation that will become the first chapter of her doctoral dissertation. She launches a slide deck showing 66 orderly test plots measuring 2 meters by 2 meters, in which she鈥檚 growing different varieties and combinations of barley and wheat on the test farm in Freeville. 鈥淚 wanted to plant North American seeds in a North American field and see if the concept holds up here,鈥 she says.
As a member of Power鈥檚 lab, she鈥檚 testing whether different combinations of wheat and barley will be more resistant to barley yellow dwarf virus, which affects the economically important crops barley, oats, wheat, maize, triticale and rice. The virus can yellow the plant鈥檚 leaves, stunt the roots, delay seed development, reduce yield and increase the plant鈥檚 susceptibility to fungi.
Aphids carry the virus and transmit it to the plants when they eat the plants鈥 sap. 鈥淢ost farmers are not hoping for aphids to attack their crops,鈥 DiPaola says. 鈥淚 was praying for aphids.鈥
Insights from her work will contribute to the team鈥檚 upcoming research in Georgia and Ethiopia.
The goal will be to ask farmers how and why they plant maslins, to collect seeds and to test hypotheses. And they鈥檒l do nutritional analyses to understand whether micronutrients could be lost by planting monocultures.
鈥淭his is a huge portion of the diet for many people,鈥 McAlvay says. 鈥淪o if you鈥檙e not planting the black barley, the red wheat, and just growing white wheat, are you suddenly missing iron or some of these other compounds? There鈥檚 a big problem in Ethiopia already, with the hidden hunger issue of micronutrient deficiency.鈥
And they鈥檙e looking into whether maslins could offer even more benefits related to climate change.
Compared with monocultures, maslins may produce more biomass 鈥 and take up more carbon than monocultures 鈥 because they tap into different nutrients and levels in the soil.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 exciting to me is wheat is the third-most grown crop in the world, millions of hectares,鈥 McAlvay says. 鈥淚f you converted a large swath of what is just wheat into wheat and barley, you could actually make a difference.鈥
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