Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie

The land use in the frontier of tropical forests has an important role of buffering the ecosystem and avoiding further degradation. In this frontier, extensive cattle-farming in mountainous pasture-land entails a high risk of soil erosion and biodiversity loss. This is the case in many tropical forests and the extents of the process may expand with the fragmentation of forests that causes that the perimeter of buffer zones multiplies. Silvopastoral systems are a type of agroforestry that is a compromise between cattle-farming and the buffer function of a frontier ecosystem. Despite many projects to encourage its implementation, including payments for ecosystem services, its adoption is slow. Despite being abundantly studied, there is no general consensus on the most relevant predictors for the adoption of agroforestry because, among other reasons, the type of agroforestry practice has an important influence. There are few studies that analyse silvopasture adoption, and very few which model the level of adoption beyond the commonly used binomial variable of adoption and non-adoption. In this paper, we model the participation and the short term adoption of silvopastoral systems in the context of a pilot project for planting fodder trees in the frontier area of a protected forest in Chiapas, Mexico. We gather cross-sectional data from 103 households about demography, income levels and livelihood strategies. We use secondary data about the level of adoption. We use a Heckman selection model to model both the participation and the level of adoption.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zabala Aizpuru, Aiora autor/a 13514, García Barrios, Luis Enrique Doctor autor 74, Pascual, Unai 1973- autor/a 13515
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Sistemas silvopastoriles, Sistemas agroforestales, Uso de la tierra, Degradación ambiental, Artfrosur,
Online Access:http://www.bioecon-network.org/pages/15th_2013/ZABALA.pdf
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:36321
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Sistemas silvopastoriles
Sistemas agroforestales
Uso de la tierra
Degradación ambiental
Artfrosur
Sistemas silvopastoriles
Sistemas agroforestales
Uso de la tierra
Degradación ambiental
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Sistemas silvopastoriles
Sistemas agroforestales
Uso de la tierra
Degradación ambiental
Artfrosur
Sistemas silvopastoriles
Sistemas agroforestales
Uso de la tierra
Degradación ambiental
Artfrosur
Zabala Aizpuru, Aiora autor/a 13514
García Barrios, Luis Enrique Doctor autor 74
Pascual, Unai 1973- autor/a 13515
Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
description The land use in the frontier of tropical forests has an important role of buffering the ecosystem and avoiding further degradation. In this frontier, extensive cattle-farming in mountainous pasture-land entails a high risk of soil erosion and biodiversity loss. This is the case in many tropical forests and the extents of the process may expand with the fragmentation of forests that causes that the perimeter of buffer zones multiplies. Silvopastoral systems are a type of agroforestry that is a compromise between cattle-farming and the buffer function of a frontier ecosystem. Despite many projects to encourage its implementation, including payments for ecosystem services, its adoption is slow. Despite being abundantly studied, there is no general consensus on the most relevant predictors for the adoption of agroforestry because, among other reasons, the type of agroforestry practice has an important influence. There are few studies that analyse silvopasture adoption, and very few which model the level of adoption beyond the commonly used binomial variable of adoption and non-adoption. In this paper, we model the participation and the short term adoption of silvopastoral systems in the context of a pilot project for planting fodder trees in the frontier area of a protected forest in Chiapas, Mexico. We gather cross-sectional data from 103 households about demography, income levels and livelihood strategies. We use secondary data about the level of adoption. We use a Heckman selection model to model both the participation and the level of adoption.
format Texto
topic_facet Sistemas silvopastoriles
Sistemas agroforestales
Uso de la tierra
Degradación ambiental
Artfrosur
author Zabala Aizpuru, Aiora autor/a 13514
García Barrios, Luis Enrique Doctor autor 74
Pascual, Unai 1973- autor/a 13515
author_facet Zabala Aizpuru, Aiora autor/a 13514
García Barrios, Luis Enrique Doctor autor 74
Pascual, Unai 1973- autor/a 13515
author_sort Zabala Aizpuru, Aiora autor/a 13514
title Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
title_short Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
title_full Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
title_fullStr Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
title_sort understanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie
url http://www.bioecon-network.org/pages/15th_2013/ZABALA.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT zabalaaizpuruaioraautora13514 understandingtheroleoflivelihoodsintheadoptionofsilvopastureinthetropicalforestfrontie
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AT pascualunai1973autora13515 understandingtheroleoflivelihoodsintheadoptionofsilvopastureinthetropicalforestfrontie
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:363212024-03-12T12:36:26ZUnderstanding the role of livelihoods in the adoption of silvopasture in the tropical forest frontie Zabala Aizpuru, Aiora autor/a 13514 García Barrios, Luis Enrique Doctor autor 74 Pascual, Unai 1973- autor/a 13515 textengThe land use in the frontier of tropical forests has an important role of buffering the ecosystem and avoiding further degradation. In this frontier, extensive cattle-farming in mountainous pasture-land entails a high risk of soil erosion and biodiversity loss. This is the case in many tropical forests and the extents of the process may expand with the fragmentation of forests that causes that the perimeter of buffer zones multiplies. Silvopastoral systems are a type of agroforestry that is a compromise between cattle-farming and the buffer function of a frontier ecosystem. Despite many projects to encourage its implementation, including payments for ecosystem services, its adoption is slow. Despite being abundantly studied, there is no general consensus on the most relevant predictors for the adoption of agroforestry because, among other reasons, the type of agroforestry practice has an important influence. There are few studies that analyse silvopasture adoption, and very few which model the level of adoption beyond the commonly used binomial variable of adoption and non-adoption. In this paper, we model the participation and the short term adoption of silvopastoral systems in the context of a pilot project for planting fodder trees in the frontier area of a protected forest in Chiapas, Mexico. We gather cross-sectional data from 103 households about demography, income levels and livelihood strategies. We use secondary data about the level of adoption. We use a Heckman selection model to model both the participation and the level of adoption.The variables that influence participation in the program are different from the variables influencing the success in the activities encouraged by the program. Results also show that livelihood strategies are significant to predict participation and level of adoption, although the direction of their effect may be different for each. This has relevant implications for the design and targeting of programs for conservation in the context of development.The land use in the frontier of tropical forests has an important role of buffering the ecosystem and avoiding further degradation. In this frontier, extensive cattle-farming in mountainous pasture-land entails a high risk of soil erosion and biodiversity loss. This is the case in many tropical forests and the extents of the process may expand with the fragmentation of forests that causes that the perimeter of buffer zones multiplies. Silvopastoral systems are a type of agroforestry that is a compromise between cattle-farming and the buffer function of a frontier ecosystem. Despite many projects to encourage its implementation, including payments for ecosystem services, its adoption is slow. Despite being abundantly studied, there is no general consensus on the most relevant predictors for the adoption of agroforestry because, among other reasons, the type of agroforestry practice has an important influence. There are few studies that analyse silvopasture adoption, and very few which model the level of adoption beyond the commonly used binomial variable of adoption and non-adoption. In this paper, we model the participation and the short term adoption of silvopastoral systems in the context of a pilot project for planting fodder trees in the frontier area of a protected forest in Chiapas, Mexico. We gather cross-sectional data from 103 households about demography, income levels and livelihood strategies. We use secondary data about the level of adoption. We use a Heckman selection model to model both the participation and the level of adoption.The variables that influence participation in the program are different from the variables influencing the success in the activities encouraged by the program. Results also show that livelihood strategies are significant to predict participation and level of adoption, although the direction of their effect may be different for each. This has relevant implications for the design and targeting of programs for conservation in the context of development.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorSistemas silvopastorilesSistemas agroforestalesUso de la tierraDegradación ambientalArtfrosurDisponible en líneahttp://www.bioecon-network.org/pages/15th_2013/ZABALA.pdfAcceso en línea sin restricciones