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  by Robert Krulwich
 November 30, 2012
 
			from
			
			NPR Website 
			  
			  
			  
			
  
 
			  
			We'll start in a cornfield - we'll call it an Iowa cornfield in late 
			summer - on a beautiful day. The corn is high. The air is 
			shimmering.
 
			  
			There's just one thing missing - and 
			it's a big thing... a very big thing, but I won't tell you what, not 
			yet.
 Instead, let's take a detour. We'll be back to the cornfield in a 
			minute, but just to make things interesting, I'm going to leap 
			halfway around the world to a public park near Cape Town, South 
			Africa, where you will notice a cube, a metal cube, lying there in 
			the grass.
 
			Sifting through samples within the cube, photographer David 
			Littschwager counted 90 separate species, including 25 types of 
			plants just on the soil surface, along with some 200 seeds 
			representing at least five of those species.
 
			  
			
  
 
			That cube was put there by David Liittschwager, a portrait 
			photographer, who spent a few years traveling the world, dropping 
			one-cubic-foot metal frames into gardens, streams, parks, forests, 
			oceans, and then photographing whatever, or whoever came through.
 
			  
			Beetles, crickets, fish, spiders, worms, 
			birds - anything big enough to be seen by the naked eye he tried to 
			capture and photograph.  
			  
			Here's what he found after 24 hours in 
			his Cape Town cube: 
			  
			  
			
			
			 These 113 creatures observed, and then photographed,
 
			include over 100 
			species of plants and animals that use one cubic foot  
			of this highly 
			diverse shrub land over the course of a normal day 
			 in Mountain 
			Fynbos, Table Mountain, South Africa. 
			  
			There were 30 different plants in that one square foot of grass, and 
			roughly 70 different insects.
 
			  
			And the coolest part, said a researcher 
			to 
			
			the Guardian in Britain, 
				
				"If we picked the cube up and walked 10 
			feet, we could get as much as 50 percent difference in plant species 
			we encountered. If we moved it uphill, we might find 
			none of the species."  
			Populations changed drastically only a few 
			feet away - and that's not counting the fungi, microbes, and the 
			itsy-bitsies that Liittschwager and his team couldn't see.
 Another example: Here's a cube placed 100 feet off the ground, in 
			the upper branches of a Strangler fig tree in Costa Rica. We're up 
			in the air here, looking down into a valley.
 
			  
			  
			
			
			 Along the 
			stout limb of a strangler fig a hundred feet
 
			up in the canopy of 
			the Monteverde cloud forest in Costa Rica,  
			a luxuriant garden 
			grows.  
			To survey this 
			tropical richness,  
			Liittschwager sampled 
			day and night, and the team recorded  
			24 plant species and 
			more than 500 insects  
			representing 100 
			species within the cube's green borders.
 
			What's up? More than 150 different plants and animals live in or 
			passed through that one square foot of tree: birds, beetles, flies, 
			moths, bugs, bugs, then more bugs...
 
			  
			  
			
			
			 Part of the 
			contents of One Cubic Foot,
 
			more than 150 
			different kinds of plants and animals were found 
			in the Monteverde 
			cube over 100 feet up in the canopy of  
			a Strangler Fig Tree 
			Location: Monteverde 
			Cloud Forest Biological Reserve, Costa Rica. 
			  
			E.O. Wilson, the Harvard biologist, in his introduction to 
			
			David Liittschwager's book of these photographs, says that it's 
			usually big animals that catch our attention. But if we get down on 
			our knees and examine any small patch of ground,
 
				
				"gradually the smaller inhabitants, 
				far more numerous, begin to eclipse them." 
			They are the critters that create and 
			aerate the soil, that pollinate, that remove the clutter. And there 
			are lots and lots and lots of them.
 
 
			  
			  
			Getting Back To The 
			Corn
 Which brings me back to Iowa, where my NPR colleague, commentator 
			and science writer Craig Childs, decided to have a little adventure.
 
			  
			As he tells it in 
			
			his new book, he 
			recruited a friend, Angus, and together they agreed to spend two 
			nights and three days ("We'll call it a long weekend") smack in the 
			middle of a 600-acre farm in 
			
			Grundy County.  
			  
			Their plan was to settle in amongst the 
			stalks (there are an "estimated three trillion" of them in Iowa) to 
			see what's living there, other than corn. In other words, a 
			Liittschwager-like census.
 Cornfields, however, are not like national parks or virgin forests. 
			Corn farmers champion corn. Anything that might eat corn, hurt corn, 
			bother corn, is killed. Their corn is bred to fight pests. The 
			ground is sprayed. The stalks are sprayed again.
 
			  
			So, like David, Craig wondered,  
				
				"What 
			will I find?"   
			
			
			 
			Corn fieldHeather Nemec /iStockphoto
 
 
			The answer amazed me. He found almost nothing.
 
				
				"I listened and heard nothing, no 
				bird, no click of insect." 
			There were no bees. The air, the ground, 
			seemed vacant. He found one ant, 
				
				"so small you couldn't pin it to a 
			specimen board."  
			A little later, crawling to a different 
			row, he found one mushroom,  
				
				"the size of an apple seed." (A relative 
			of the one pictured below.)  
			Then, later, a cobweb spider eating a 
			crane fly (only one). A single red mite "the size of a dust mote 
			hurrying across the barren earth," some grasshoppers, and that's it.  
			  
			Though he crawled and crawled, he found nothing else. 
				
				"It felt like another planet 
				entirely," he said, a world denuded. 
			
			 
			Organisms found in 
			and Iowa cornfield:  
			an ant, one mushroom, 
			a cobweb spider,  
			a half eaten crane 
			fly, a red mite and some grasshoppers.Illustration by NPR
 
 
			Yet, 100 years ago, these same fields, these prairies, were home to 
			300 species of plants, 60 mammals, 300 birds, hundreds and hundreds 
			of insects.
 
			  
			This soil was the richest, the loamiest 
			in the state. And now, in these patches, there is almost literally 
			nothing but one kind of living thing. We've erased everything else.
 We need to feed our planet, of course. But we also need the teeny 
			creatures that drive all life on earth. There's something strange 
			about a farm that intentionally creates a biological desert to 
			produce food for one species: us.
 
			  
			It's efficient, yes. But it's so 
			efficient that the ants are missing, the bees are missing, and even 
			the birds stay away.  
			  
			Something's not right here.  
			  
			Our cornfields are too quiet...
 
			  
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