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Showing posts from March, 2016

Ethiopia’s vulnerable tropical forests are key to securing future of wild coffee

The Conversation March 23, 2016 Coffee is the drink of choice for millions of us. But the world’s  second-most traded commodity  originates in Ethiopia – and its home is under threat. Ethiopia isn’t all dusty deserts – far from it. The country also contains rugged highlands and lush, tropical forests.  Coffea arabica  grows here in its original, wild form. The forests of south-west Ethiopia are considered to be the birthplace of coffee and the centre of its genetic diversity. But these forests and this gene pool are under pressure. It is already one of the last major woodlands remaining in Ethiopia, and deforestation over the past 40 years has resulted in  the loss of one-third of the south-west’s forest cover . We risk losing the forests entirely in coming decades. It is critical that these forests are protected. Commercially grown coffee has been bred over the years to ensure high yields and other useful characteristics. But it is descend...