The Harvest That Should Not Have Failed
In the early reports that circulated among agricultural monitoring centers during the late 21st century, there was nothing immediately alarming. Crop yields were still being recorded at levels considered “stable,” global food distribution networks continued operating within expected margins, and satellite imagery showed vast stretches of cultivated land behaving largely as predicted by long-established models. Yet beneath these reassuring indicators, a quieter and more difficult pattern was beginning to emerge, one that only became visible when analysts compared data sets across multiple years rather than seasonal cycles. The first anomaly was not a collapse in production, but a change in quality that standard metrics were not designed to detect. Wheat kernels were slightly smaller. Corn stalks required more water to reach the same height. Soil samples showed no immediate contamination, yet microbial diversity had begun to decline in ways that did not match known environmental stresso...