Why biodiversity is vital to food security

As the COP16 summit in Cali, Colombia wraps up, it is increasingly clear that biodiversity and food insecurity are intimately linked. Why is the biological richness of the world so important to the food we eat?

Why is biodiversity so important to food?

“There is no human food without the food chain, from the smallest microorganism transforming the inorganic to the organic to the largest ruminants enhancing ecosystem functioning in the largest terrestrial biome on earth – grasslands,” Simon Kraemer, policy steward for regenerative agrifood systems at the European Alliance for Regenerative Agriculture (EARA), told FoodNavigator.

“Indigenous food systems have stewarded ecosystems for biocultural diversity increase for thousands of years. Since agriculture has become exploitative with the use of ploughs and the segregation of plant and animal cultivation, biodiversity has been decreasing the last 2000 years.”

“Soil health is highly impacted by biodiversity, which in turn affects the way plants grow,” Tom Stuart, senior policy advisor at the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), told FoodNavigator. “Soil is more than just a lifeless material; it’s a complex ecosystem full of living things, or organisms. These organisms help soil function effectively, making nutrients available to plants, forming structures that support root growth, and regulate water flow to both retain moisture in dry weather and prevent flooding during heavy rain.

“Nature also provides essential ‘ecosystem services’,” he continued, “like pollination, pest control, and waste decomposition. When biodiversity decreases, these services are reduced, making it harder to grow the food we rely on.”