According
 to Puerto Rican ecology and natural resources professor Dr. Ivette 
Perfecto from the University of Michigan, farmers could benefit while 
helping to save the planet from turning to organic farming and 
agroecology, or working along nature’s principles to produce food. 
In
 her research, Dr. Perfecto observed that large crop agricultural 
landscapes, such as coffee farms in Costa Rica, are able to host diverse
 and healthy wildlife. In contrast, isolated patches of rainforest or 
nature preserves are not able to sustain even the reduced number of 
species living there. 
Her studies concluded that small-scale 
farmers and their organic or agroecological methods, the latter of which
 minimize the use of fertilizers and do not use pesticides, could 
therefore protect biodiversity – with farmers benefiting from greater 
yields. 
She stated, 『A variety of studies have shown 
convincingly that organic agriculture is at least as productive as 
industrial agriculture, and according to Food and Agriculture 
Organization (FAO) data, the smaller the farm the more productivity. 
In
 other words, if you want to increase production the most efficient way 
to do so is to break up the mega farms, distribute the land to 
small-scale farmers and provide training in agroecology.』 Dr. Perfecto 
recently co-authored a book on the solution titled, 『Nature’s Matrix: 
Linking Agriculture, Conservation and Food Sovereignty』 in which she 
cites the rapid deforestation of the Amazon rainforest in emphasizing 
the need to shift toward small-scale organic farming. 
According 
to related research by Dr. Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy 
Institute, the Amazon is being cleared both by cattle ranching and 
soybean farming, with soybean crops for cattle feed causing both crop 
fields and grazing lands to extend even deeper into the forest. 
Dr.
 Brown states that the key to protecting the rainforest’s biodiversity 
is to decrease consumers’ demand for meat products and their associated 
soy crops. 
Our appreciation, Dr. Perfecto, for these insights 
into a more efficient and sustainable agriculture sector, as we thank 
Dr. Brown for addressing the issue’s root cause. 
Let us step in 
awareness to nourish  the world through the most eco-conscious and 
plentiful method of organic vegan farming. As in an interview published 
in the September 2009 edition of The House Magazine, Supreme Master 
Ching Hai has frequently highlighted the transformation of our 
agricultural system that would return balance to our imperiled planet.
Supreme Master Ching Hai: There are 
so many benefits from organic vegan farming, as well as many benefiting 
parties. First, for the farmers, organic vegan farming is productive, 
saving 37% more energy and even more water than conventional farming 
methods. 
Wildlife and ecosystems also win. According to the 
largest study done on organic farming in the UK compared to conventional
 farms, organic farms contained 85% more plant species, with 71% taller 
and thicker hedges, and a healthy return of native animals across the 
species. 
Organic soil matter also absorbs CO2 so effectively 
that the Rodale Institute calls organic vegan farming a powerful 
strategy to reduce global warming, by up to 40% of all CO2 emissions now
 in the atmosphere. 
The government can support this organic 
vegan farming through subsidies. They can also redirect the funds away 
from the meat industry and instead toward encouraging citizens to plant,
 to buy and to choose organic vegan food. And when they do, we will soon
 have a lot of healthy, happy, productive people, 
a restored green 
environment, and minimum climate mitigation costs – something all 
governments can look forward to and gain the enthusiastic support of all
 citizens. 
http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0504-hance_perfecto.html http://ehsmanager.blogspot.com/2010/05/natures-matrix-how-agricultural.htmlhttp://www.coolearth.org/306/news-32/rainforest-news-155/activist-and-eco-expert-calls-for-agricultural-revolution-1356.html  
http://www.earthpolicy.org/index.php?/plan_b_updates/2009/update86