NOTES FROM NATURE
By Jerry Toll
"When A Crop Becomes King"
Jerry Toll submitted the following article, "When a Crop
Becomes King," by Michael Pollan, author of the widely acclaimed Botany
of Desire: A Plant's Eye View of the World. The text of the article
follows.
Here in southern New England the corn is waist high and
growing so avidly you can almost hear the creak of stalk and leaf as the
plants stretch toward the sun. . .These days the nation's nearly 80
million-acre field of corn rolls across the countryside like a second great
lawn, but this wholesome, all-American image obscures a decidedly more
dubious reality.
Like the tulip, the apple and the potato, zea mays (the
botanical name for both sweet and feed corn) has evolved with humans over
the past 10,000 years or so in the great dance of species we call
domestication. The plant gratifies human needs, in exchange for which humans
expand the plant's habitat, moving its genes all over the world and remaking
the land (clearing trees, plowing the ground, protecting it from its
enemies). . .
Corn, by making itself tasty and nutritious, got itself
noticed by Christopher Columbus, who helped expand its range from the New
World to Europe and beyond. Today corn is the world's most widely planted
cereal crop.
But nowhere have humans done quite as much to advance the
interests of this plant as in North America, where zea mays has insinuated
itself into our landscape, our food system—and our federal budget.
One need look no further than the $190 billion farm bill
President Bush signed last month to wonder whose interests are really being
served here. Under the 10-year program, taxpayers will pay farmers $4 billion a year to grow ever more
corn, this despite the fact that we struggle to get rid of the surplus the
plant already produces.
The average bushel of corn (56 pounds) sells for about $2
today: it costs farmers more than $3 to grow it. But rather than design a
program that would encourage farmers to plant less corn—which would have the
benefit of lifting the price farmers receive for it—Congress has decided
instead to subsidize corn by the bushel, thereby insuring that zea mays'
dominion over its 125,000-square mile American habitat will go unchallenged.
At first blush this subsidy might look like a handout for
farmers, but really it's a form of welfare for the plant itself and for all
those economic interests that profit from its overproduction: the
processors, factory farms, and the soft drink and snack makers that rely on
cheap corn. For zea mays has triumphed by making itself indispensable not to
farmers (whom it is swiftly and surely bankrupting) but to the Archer
Daniels Midlands, Tysons and Coca Colas of the world.
Our entire food supply has undergone a process of "cornification"
in recent years, without our ever noticing it. That's because. . .in the
United States most of the corn we consume is invisible, having been heavily
processed or passed through food animals before it reaches us. Most of the
animals we eat (chickens, pigs and cows) today subsist on a diet of corn,
regardless of whether it is good for them.
In the case of beef cattle, which evolved to eat grass, a
corn diet wreaks havoc on their digestive system, making it necessary to
feed them antibiotics to stave off illness and infection. Even farm-raised
salmon are being bred to tolerate corn—not a food their evolution has
prepared them for.
Why feed fish corn? Because it's the cheapest thing you
can feed any animal, thanks to federal subsidies.
But even with more than half of the 10 billion bushels of
corn produced annually being fed to animals, there is plenty left over. So
companies like A.D.M. Cargill and ConAgra have figured ingenious new ways to
dispose of it, turning it into everything from ethanol to Vitamin C and
biodegradable plastics.
By far the best strategy for keeping zea mays in business
has been the development of high-fructose corn syrup, which has all but
pushed sugar aside. Since the 1980's most soft drink manufacturers have
switched from sugar to corn sweeteners, as have most snack makers. Nearly 10
percent of the calories Americans consume now come from corn sweeteners; the
figure is 20 % for many children. Add to that all the corn-based animal
protein (corn-fed beef, chicken and pork) and the corn qua corn (chips,
muffins, sweet corn) and you have a plant that has become one of nature's
greatest success stories, by turning us (along with several other equally
unwitting species) into an expanding race of corn eaters.
The problem in corn's case is that we're sacrificing the
health of both our bodies and the environment by growing and eating so much
of it. Though we're only beginning to understand what our cornified food
system is doing to our health, there's a cause for concern.
It's probably no coincidence that the wholesale switch to
corn sweeteners in the 1980's marks the beginning of the epidemic of obesity
and Type 2 diabetes in this country. Sweetness became so cheap that soft
drink makers, rather than lower their prices, supersized their serving
portions and marketing budgets. Thousands of new sweetened snack foods
hit the market, and the amount of fructose in our diets soared.
This would be bad enough for the American waistline, but
there's also preliminary research suggesting that high-fructose corn syrup
is metabolized differently than other sugars, making it potentially more
harmful. A recent study at the University of Minnesota found that a diet
high in fructose (as compared to glucose) elevates triglyceride levels in
men shortly after eating, a phenomenon that has been linked to an increased
risk of obesity and heart disease. . .
We know a lot more about what 80 million acres of corn is
doing to the health of our environment: serious and lasting damage. Modern
corn hybrids are the greediest of plants, demanding more nitrogen fertilizer
than any other crop. Corn requires more pesticide than any other food crop.
Runoff from these chemicals finds its way into the groundwater and, in the
Midwestern corn belt, into the Mississippi River, which carries it to the
Gulf of Mexico where it has already killed off marine life in a 12,000
square mile area.
To produce the chemicals we apply to our cornfields takes
vast amounts of oil and natural gas. (Nitrogen fertilizer is made from
natural gas, pesticides from oil). America's corn crop might look like a
sustainable, solar-powered system for producing food, but it is actually a
huge, inefficient, polluting machine that guzzles fossil fuel, a half gallon
of it for every bushel.
So it seems corn has indeed become king. We have given it
more of our land than any other plant. . .To keep it well fed and safe from
predators, we douse it with chemicals that poison our water and deepen our dependence on foreign oil. And
then. . .we eat it as fast as we can in as many ways as we can—turning the
fat of the land into, well, fat. One has to wonder whether corn hasn't at
last succeeded in domesticating us.

Previous Notes from Nature:
01/24/08