Can agroforestry enhance the resilience of agricultural commodity production systems?

Date Issued
2014-02Language
enType
Journal ArticleAccessibility
Open AccessUsage rights
CC-BY-3.0Metadata
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Carsan S, Stroebel A, Dawson I, Kindt R, Mowo JG, Jamnadass R. 2014. Can agroforestry enhance the resilience of agricultural commodity production systems? Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 6:35-40.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/65648
Abstract/Description
Agricultural commodity production in a changing climate scenario is undergoing sustainability challenges due to degradation of soil fertility, water and biodiversity resources. In Africa, yields for important cereals (e.g., maize) have stagnated at 1 t ha−1 due to land degradation, low fertilizer use and water stress. Resource-conserving options such as agroforestry promote integrated management systems that relate livelihoods and ecosystem service functions to agricultural production. Low input practices including improved fallows using legumes in rotations or intercrops can restore soil nutrients, improve soil carbon and reduce reliance on fertilizer use by 50%. We review how agroforestry can sustain agricultural intensification in Africa by regulating ecosystem functions such as nutrient recycling, water use, species diversity and agrochemical pollution.
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AGROVOC Keywords
Subjects
CLIMATE-SMART TECHNOLOGIES AND PRACTICES;Regions
AfricaCollections
- CCAFS Journal Articles [1252]