Maybe some would grow here. Staple tree crops can take root in forest farms, multi-strata agro-forestry or tree inter-cropping systems.
In many cases they can reverse erosion and runoff and create higher infiltration rates for rainwater. Some like arid conditions, steep slopes and a wide range of soils.
The yield is 2.4 times higher than annual staples and they require less fuel, fertiliser and pesticide.
There is also an article on managed grazing:
In the Serengeti, where original grasslands are still intact, they are abundant lands with carbon-rich soil 10 feet deep.
The migrating herds eat grass, herbs and weeds down to the crown. They eat some trees as far as they can reach, and manure the land. Then they move on, and return to lush crops next year ... Put those animals behind a fence, and it is a whole different story — the result is usually unending desert land
Worse still, place cattle in a feedlot and measure their impact on the environment and climate — they rank with coal as being one of the greatest detriments to the planet.
With a changing erratic weather pattern, maybe New Zealand could try a version of the Serengeti system. If the weather is warm and damp, then the pasture only needs a month to recover. If it is colder, or hotter, and drier then it may take a year to recover.
Trees are also an integral component of this system, so perhaps NZ could try some of the tropical trees listed above. Together with trees that provide feed for animals as well — the lucerne tree, bamboo, willow and some acacias.
Some information is very hopeful. Electric vehicles are four times as efficient as gas-powered ones, and when powered by wind turbines at today's prices, the electrical equivalent of gasolene is 30 to 50 cents per gallon. When people were tied to horse-drawn transport, it would have been impossible to imagine how the world would change with coal and oil technology. I hope the same will one day be said of this civilisation.
Sara Dickon is a member of NCWNZ, UNANZ Whanganui, and a founder member Sustainable Whanganui