Yes, that is what we think, to some degree. There is a program under the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity to deal with this very issue. Historically, if you look at the trends over the past decades, you see a decrease in agricultural biodiversity and a homogenization of genetic stocks.
In fact, when this capacity to choose and share seed belongs to a greater number of actors, we see greater biological diversity. It is through these processes that biological diversity was created, and not through plant variety certificates or the patents that are being promoted today.