Risotto rice under threat from flamingoes in north-eastern Italy (www.theguardian.com)
from babysandpiper@sopuli.xyz to world@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 11:11
https://sopuli.xyz/post/30279945

Farmers are seeking ways to fend off birds who are stirring up soil in flooded paddy fields in Ferrara province

An unusual bird is ravaging crops and infuriating farmers in north-eastern Italy: the flamingo.

Flamingos are relatively recent arrivals in the area, and have settled into the flooded fields that produce rice for risotto in Ferrara province, between Venice and Ravenna.

The birds aren’t targeting the rice seedlings but use their webbed feet to stir up the soil and snatch molluscs, algae or insects from the shallow water. The rice is collateral damage.

#world

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palordrolap@fedia.io on 12 Jul 12:25 next collapse

Edit: See responses for why this probably wouldn't work. Nonetheless, if I was a grower I might look into it anyway just to see what happens. How much could a dry corner of a field affect margins anyway...

Fun fact: Rice can be grown in the dry. The reason it's grown in the wet is that, unlike other grasses, it tolerates being grown in the wet, and so the water protects the rice from unspecified environmental factors.

My point here being the question as to whether the factors that destroy rice in the dry are worse than these flamingos. And if not, there's a solution presenting itself here.

6nk06@sh.itjust.works on 12 Jul 12:31 next collapse

Or you could make a great recipe of risotto with flamingo meat. Just saying.

womjunru@lemmy.cafe on 12 Jul 17:14 next collapse

My first thought.

FelixCress@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 18:04 collapse

Taste just like chicken

Nawor3565@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 12 Jul 12:42 next collapse

I don’t think it’s unspecified, it’s to keep weeds away. Using weed killing chemicals to kill off any plants in your field apart from the specially-weed-killer-resistant crops is super common in agriculture, and is terrible for the environment.

You seem to be against the idea of growing rice in flooded fields, can I ask why? It’s not like this is in some places like California that’s in constant drought.

Bademantel@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 13:24 collapse

Not OP but in addition to the water consumption you already mentioned, flooded rice fields also produce a lot of methane due to the oxygen-free conditions at the bottom and the abundance of organic material.

This could be mitigated if fields would be drained periodically.

Cheradenine@sh.itjust.works on 12 Jul 13:02 collapse

There are quite a few dryland crops. The rice usually used for Risotto, in this case Arborio, is not one of them.

I’m pretty sure that even if you grew Arborio as a dryland that you couldn’t sell it as Arborio because of DOP. Which would change its flavor, probably its starch balance, and decrease its price.

mctoasterson@reddthat.com on 12 Jul 17:26 next collapse

You know, in addition to making risotto, another thing the Italians are pretty good at is making shotguns. So this problem should be solvable.

GraniteM@lemmy.world on 12 Jul 20:07 collapse

Could they do the thing that airports do with geese, where they get a Labrador to run around and bark at the birds and the birds say, “Ehh… fuck this area” and leave of their own accord?