
Food grown with fewer chemicals? A Brazilian scientist wins US$500,000 for showing the way
DES MOINES, Iowa — A Brazilian scientist who pushed back against chemical fertilizers and researched biologically based approaches to more robust food production has been honored with this year's World Food Prize, the organization announced Tuesday.
Microbiologist Mariangela Hungria's research helped her country become an agricultural powerhouse, an accomplishment that has now won her $500,000 from the Iowa-based World Food Prize Foundation. Hungria has been researching biological seed and soil treatments for 40 years, and has worked with Brazilian farmers to implement her findings.
'I still cannot believe it. Everybody said, my whole life, it's improbable, you are going the wrong way, just go to things like chemicals and so on. And then, I received the most important prize in the world of agriculture,' Hungria said in an interview. 'Sometimes I still think I'll wake up and see that it's not true.'
Norman Borlaug, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his work to dramatically increase crop yields and reduce the threat of starvation in many countries, founded the World Food Prize. Since the first prize was handed out in 1987, 55 people have been honored.
Hungria said she grew up wanting to alleviate hunger. Early in her career, she decided to focus on a process called biological nitrogen fixation, in which soil bacteria could be used to promote plant growth. At that time, farmers in Brazil and around the world were reluctant to reduce their use of nitrogen fertilizers, which dramatically increase crop production but lead to greenhouse gas emissions and pollutes waterways.
Hungria studied how bacteria can interact with plant roots to naturally produce nitrogen. She then demonstrated her work on test plots and began working directly with farmers to convince them that they wouldn't have to sacrifice high crop yields if they switched to a biological process.
The work is credited for increasing yields of several crops, including wheat, corn and beans, but it has been especially affective on soybeans. Brazil has since become the world's largest soybean producer, surpassing the United States and Argentina.
Although Hungria's research could be applied on farms in other countries, soybean production in the U.S. is different than it is in Brazil; American farmers typically rotate crops on their land between growing corn and soybeans. Enough nitrate fertilizer applied to corn still remains in the soil when soybeans are planted that little or no fertilizer needs to be applied, Hungria said.
Brazilian agricultural companies have faced fierce criticism for clearing forested land to create farmland, largely to grow soybeans.
Much of that criticism is justified, Hungria said, but she added that her biological approach builds up the soil and makes further encroachment into forested areas less necessary.
'If you manage the crop well, the crop will enrich the soil with nitrogen. Soil health improves if you do the right things,' she said.
Hungria will be awarded her prize at an annual October gathering in Des Moines, Iowa, of agricultural researchers and officials from around the world.
Gebisa Ejeta, chair of the World Food Prize Laureate Selection Committee, credited Hungria for her 'extraordinary scientific achievements' that have transformed agriculture in South America.
'Her brilliant scientific work and her committed vision for advancing sustainable crop production to feed humanity with judicious use of chemical fertilizer inputs and biological amendments has gained her global recognition both at home and abroad,' Ejeta said in a statement.
Scott Mcfetridge, The Associated Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Globe and Mail
7 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
When the water breaks in the Amazon, call the midwife
In photos Midwives in rural Brazil are more vital than ever in places where depleted rivers – a hazard of climate change – put hospitals out of reach Photography by Pilar Olivares Reporting by Pilar Olivares and Manuela Andreoni Reuters Tabita dos Santos Moraes, with Priscilla the dog, rests on a journey down Brazil's Tefé River in a boat steered by her husband, Nonato Lima de Moraes. Tabita, 51, has been practising midwifery since her teens. to view this content.


CTV News
a day ago
- CTV News
Chinese nationals accused in U.S. pathogen plot for possible agricultural terrorism
Two Chinese scientists are accused of smuggling pathogens into the U.S., which officials say could be used to seriously damage the country's agricultural industry.


CBC
5 days ago
- CBC
Bugs poised to flit into action for the season, P.E.I. scientist says
Humans aren't the only creatures that stay relatively hidden when the weather is lousy. This spring's chilly and rainy weather sidelined insects too, but a Charlottetown-based research scientist says that will change quickly now that the mercury is rising. "They tend to stay quiet when it's cold," Christine Noronha told CBC's Island Morning this week. "If this continues for very long, then it starts to have an impact on their survival and their movement." Noronha works with Agriculture and AgriFood Canada. She said bug survival rates have been "a little bit better" recently because Prince Edward Island's winters have been getting milder. Even when the temperature plummets, bugs can find shelter in plant debris and snow that collects along hedgerows. "With the spring being so cool, the insects are a little bit slower coming out," she said. "They wouldn't be feeding as much as well, [or] just moving around too from plant to plant or from one area to the next. "But [when] it does warm up, then you'll start to see them feeding a lot more, moving, flying around, moving from plant to plant … and also laying their eggs." That's because insects don't generate their own body heat like humans and other mammals do, but depend on external heat sources, Noronha said. "When the sun is shining, you will see some of them sitting in the sun or basking in the sun, kind of. They need that heat to heat up their … wing muscles so that they can fly. "Usually around 15 to 20 degrees is when they start to get really active." That can change even over the course of a single spring day, she said. Bumblebees, for example, are "kind of slow in the early morning when you see them, but then later on in the day, if it's sunny, they'll start moving around a lot more." Now for the bad news. "Mosquitoes and black flies and all that are doing fine," Noronha said. "They have a lower temperature range, so they are fine. They are out there." There is a bright side to that, though. Tree swallows and some other kinds of birds eat those insects, and frogs and minnows feed on the larvae of mosquitoes and black flies. "All those animals are doing fine, so it's just a slower process," Noronha said. "They're not getting as much to eat. But things haven't really come to that point where other animals are more active and insects are not." Another thing that people are seeing, according to Island social media pages dedicated to nature, are very large bees hanging around windows. Noronha said these are probably females emerging from their overwintering spots. "Insects in the fall, they come to the buildings because the buildings have heat and you have heat radiating out," she said. "Now they're searching for a place to start their nest because that's what happens every year… They search for places [where] they could make their bigger nest and have a colony… Eventually they're going to be the queens in the nest." Noronha said it's important for people who spend time in the woods or walking through tall grass to be on the lookout for ticks, which can spread Lyme disease. Wear long pants with long socks on, and check when you get home to see if a tick has attached itself to your skin. If that happens, she said you should remove the tick, put it in a container and get it checked to see what kind of tick it is. That's also her advice if you see an unusual insect around your property. Use iNaturalist or other online resources to find out what they are. "It's only when you know what something is that you can actually control it – or know if you need to control it or not. "The good bugs that are predators, you don't want to kill them, right? You want to keep them in the area."