Malaysia is blessed as a biodiversity hotspot with more than 370 native species of fruit-bearing trees, many of which grow in the wild. We are familiar with banana, papaya, pineapple, durian, mangosteen, rambutan, mango, watermelon, pitaya, guava, pomelo, starfruit, jackfruit, cempedak, and langsat, but ambarella, pulasan and salak are less common. For me the more uncommon are seashore mangosteen (beruas), plum mango (kundang), horse mango (bacang), rose apple (jambu mawar), Malay apple (jambu susu) and Indian jujube (epal siam). My favorite local fruit include Durian (See photo above), mango, starfruits, manggis, jackfruits and papaya. Some fruits are native to Sabah and Sarawak, such as Borneo mango (bambangan), African black olive (dabai), and orange-fleshed durian (durian nyekak). These underused fruits, rich in minerals and phytonutrients, represent hidden gems in our forests that contribute to the nutritious diets of indigenous people. They have a huge potential for further promotion in Malaysia and globally. Trees contribute to more than 75 per cent of global carbon storage on agricultural land, despite only 43 per cent of land having more than 10 per cent tree cover. Furthermore, agro-forests have a higher floral, faunal and soil microbial diversity relative to mo-noculture farms. Agroforests, or agro-parks, promote agricultural land restoration while playing an important role in hydrological cycles and the availability of groundwater recharge during rainfall to prevent soil degradation or landslide.
Fruit pricing is linked to consumer behaviour, demand, supply and socio-economic development as well as geopolitical factors. Monoculture increases the vulnerability of farmers to price fluctuation, climate change and pandemics. The drop in price of local banana exemplifies these scenarios when all farmers grew the same crop during the Movement Control Order last year. Therefore actually the foster more productive, environmentally sustainable and resilient agricultural systems. In the upscaling of tropical fruit plantations should be diversified while avoiding deforestation for greater resource use efficiency and carbon sequestration capacity to conserve biodiversity and provide better diet quality. Diversification of tropical fruit trees not only reduces poverty with extra income from cash crops, but also promotes domestic food security. Agro-forests are suited for family farming. They can even become tourist attractions for urban escapades with guided farm tours and fruit buffets. A good success story would be the Penang fruit farm established in 1993 as the largest collection in Southeast Asia with more than 200 diverse edible fruit species. Revitalisation of local tropical fruits will require concerted action from all stakeholders to provide affordable, accessible, safe, and appealing fruit products to all. The National Agro-Food Policy 2.0 (2021-2030) is much welcomed to support a transformational sustainable change in fruit agricultural systems and attracting young agropreneurs. Local councils can identify underused agricultural land reserves or deforested or degraded land to be developed into agroforests or agro-parks with subsidies or micro-credit provision for urban farming. Other actions include facilitating market access by small-scale producers and incentivising agricultural enterprises with safety and quality assurance in supply chains. Innovations should be encouraged to reduce losses and waste during post-harvest and transportation, decrease consumptions of natural resources or energy, and minimise ecological footprint of supply chains of fruits. Together we can revitalise Malaysia as a fruit paradise. Thanks... Source: NST.
M Anem,
Putrajaya,
Malaysia.
October 2023.
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