01/10/2023
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Adapted from The Ecology of Care: Medicine, Agriculture, Money, and the Quiet Power of Human and Microbial Communities by
Plants, microorganisms, insects, and animals are constantly working to regenerate vibrant, productive landscapes. In places where humans have let other species lead the way, their “biological work” is already accomplishing many of the tasks we haven’t figured out how to do for ourselves:
💦Providing clean drinking water to address global water shortages
🌲Rebuilding fertile, productive soils
🐝Attracting pollinators and soil-building insects like earthworms and dung beetles
🍎Eliminating the need for chemical interventions in agriculture
🥘Increasing local food security
🍠Providing a wide variety of nutrient-dense foods with more vitamins and minerals, without pesticides or antibiotic residues
🌊Decreasing agricultural runoff into rivers, lakes, and oceans
😁Preventing human conflicts over resources
🍄Providing the conditions that support biologically diverse plant, animal, microbial, and fungal life
🌍Reducing the impact of climate change by:
🌧Creating stable soils that won’t get washed away in floods
🌱Keeping moisture in soils and vegetation to prevent drought and wildfires
🌊Keeping water cycling in local landscapes rather than contributing to ocean rise
🌦Cooling the surrounding landscape and stabilizing the weather patterns through transpiration
🔥Reducing wildfire risks
🌻Taking CO2 from the atmosphere, and turning it into an essential workforce that knows how to do all the above.