The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity

Circular food systems are increasingly acknowledged for their potential to contribute to the transition towards sustainable futures. In a circular food system, the use of finite and limited resources is minimized, and nutrients in residual streams and inedible biomass for humans are reused as inputs in the bioeconomy. Livestock has become relevant in this narrative for upcycling nutrients contained in food by-products and grass resources into nutritious food for humans without using human-edible resources. Evaluating on-going national sustainability initiatives in the livestock sector is key to determine if circularity elements are already represented and to identify new opportunities and pathways for the future. In this paper we synthetize the environmental actions promoted by different initiatives driving the sustainable transformation of Colombian cattle production systems and assess the inclusion of circularity elements in these actions. The proposed environmental actions were concentrated in the conservation of remaining natural ecosystems, zero-deforestation and the sustainable intensification of cattle production through silvopastoral and paddock rotational systems. Circularity was addressed by some initiatives via the use organic fertilizers and the use of manure as fertilizers or feedstock for bioenergy generation. However, given that cattle farming is often practiced in low-input systems where the collection of by-products for reutilization (e.g., manure) is not always feasible, these actions are expected to have limited impact in the sector. Silvopastoral systems can positively promote circularity by creating the conditions for internal nutrient recycling via litterfall, biological nitrogen fixation, phosphorus solubilization, and presence of beneficial insects. However, to avoid food-feed competition and to remain circular, these should only be installed in agricultural areas unsuitable for crop production. In areas where crops can grow, other production systems that prioritize the production of plant biomass for human consumption (i.e., agrosilvopastoral systems, mixed croplivestock systems or forms of crop intercropping) should be considered.

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Main Authors: Parodi, Alejandro autor, Valencia Salazar, Sara Stephanie Doctora autora 19543, Loboguerrero, Ana María autora, Martínez Barón, Deissy autora, Murgueitio, Enrique autor, Vázquez Rowe, Ian autor
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Productividad ganadera, Sistemas agrosilvopastoriles, Ganadería sustentable, Restauración ecológica, Conservación de los recursos naturales,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000074
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:62976
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 Productividad ganadera
Sistemas agrosilvopastoriles
Ganadería sustentable
Restauración ecológica
Conservación de los recursos naturales
Productividad ganadera
Sistemas agrosilvopastoriles
Ganadería sustentable
Restauración ecológica
Conservación de los recursos naturales
spellingShingle Productividad ganadera
Sistemas agrosilvopastoriles
Ganadería sustentable
Restauración ecológica
Conservación de los recursos naturales
Productividad ganadera
Sistemas agrosilvopastoriles
Ganadería sustentable
Restauración ecológica
Conservación de los recursos naturales
Parodi, Alejandro autor
Valencia Salazar, Sara Stephanie Doctora autora 19543
Loboguerrero, Ana María autora
Martínez Barón, Deissy autora
Murgueitio, Enrique autor
Vázquez Rowe, Ian autor
The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
description Circular food systems are increasingly acknowledged for their potential to contribute to the transition towards sustainable futures. In a circular food system, the use of finite and limited resources is minimized, and nutrients in residual streams and inedible biomass for humans are reused as inputs in the bioeconomy. Livestock has become relevant in this narrative for upcycling nutrients contained in food by-products and grass resources into nutritious food for humans without using human-edible resources. Evaluating on-going national sustainability initiatives in the livestock sector is key to determine if circularity elements are already represented and to identify new opportunities and pathways for the future. In this paper we synthetize the environmental actions promoted by different initiatives driving the sustainable transformation of Colombian cattle production systems and assess the inclusion of circularity elements in these actions. The proposed environmental actions were concentrated in the conservation of remaining natural ecosystems, zero-deforestation and the sustainable intensification of cattle production through silvopastoral and paddock rotational systems. Circularity was addressed by some initiatives via the use organic fertilizers and the use of manure as fertilizers or feedstock for bioenergy generation. However, given that cattle farming is often practiced in low-input systems where the collection of by-products for reutilization (e.g., manure) is not always feasible, these actions are expected to have limited impact in the sector. Silvopastoral systems can positively promote circularity by creating the conditions for internal nutrient recycling via litterfall, biological nitrogen fixation, phosphorus solubilization, and presence of beneficial insects. However, to avoid food-feed competition and to remain circular, these should only be installed in agricultural areas unsuitable for crop production. In areas where crops can grow, other production systems that prioritize the production of plant biomass for human consumption (i.e., agrosilvopastoral systems, mixed croplivestock systems or forms of crop intercropping) should be considered.
format Texto
topic_facet Productividad ganadera
Sistemas agrosilvopastoriles
Ganadería sustentable
Restauración ecológica
Conservación de los recursos naturales
author Parodi, Alejandro autor
Valencia Salazar, Sara Stephanie Doctora autora 19543
Loboguerrero, Ana María autora
Martínez Barón, Deissy autora
Murgueitio, Enrique autor
Vázquez Rowe, Ian autor
author_facet Parodi, Alejandro autor
Valencia Salazar, Sara Stephanie Doctora autora 19543
Loboguerrero, Ana María autora
Martínez Barón, Deissy autora
Murgueitio, Enrique autor
Vázquez Rowe, Ian autor
author_sort Parodi, Alejandro autor
title The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
title_short The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
title_full The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
title_fullStr The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
title_full_unstemmed The sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
title_sort sustainable transformation of the colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000074
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:629762022-10-19T15:29:42ZThe sustainable transformation of the Colombian cattle sector assessing its circularity Parodi, Alejandro autor Valencia Salazar, Sara Stephanie Doctora autora 19543 Loboguerrero, Ana María autora Martínez Barón, Deissy autora Murgueitio, Enrique autor Vázquez Rowe, Ian autor textengCircular food systems are increasingly acknowledged for their potential to contribute to the transition towards sustainable futures. In a circular food system, the use of finite and limited resources is minimized, and nutrients in residual streams and inedible biomass for humans are reused as inputs in the bioeconomy. Livestock has become relevant in this narrative for upcycling nutrients contained in food by-products and grass resources into nutritious food for humans without using human-edible resources. Evaluating on-going national sustainability initiatives in the livestock sector is key to determine if circularity elements are already represented and to identify new opportunities and pathways for the future. In this paper we synthetize the environmental actions promoted by different initiatives driving the sustainable transformation of Colombian cattle production systems and assess the inclusion of circularity elements in these actions. The proposed environmental actions were concentrated in the conservation of remaining natural ecosystems, zero-deforestation and the sustainable intensification of cattle production through silvopastoral and paddock rotational systems. Circularity was addressed by some initiatives via the use organic fertilizers and the use of manure as fertilizers or feedstock for bioenergy generation. However, given that cattle farming is often practiced in low-input systems where the collection of by-products for reutilization (e.g., manure) is not always feasible, these actions are expected to have limited impact in the sector. Silvopastoral systems can positively promote circularity by creating the conditions for internal nutrient recycling via litterfall, biological nitrogen fixation, phosphorus solubilization, and presence of beneficial insects. However, to avoid food-feed competition and to remain circular, these should only be installed in agricultural areas unsuitable for crop production. In areas where crops can grow, other production systems that prioritize the production of plant biomass for human consumption (i.e., agrosilvopastoral systems, mixed croplivestock systems or forms of crop intercropping) should be considered.Circular food systems are increasingly acknowledged for their potential to contribute to the transition towards sustainable futures. In a circular food system, the use of finite and limited resources is minimized, and nutrients in residual streams and inedible biomass for humans are reused as inputs in the bioeconomy. Livestock has become relevant in this narrative for upcycling nutrients contained in food by-products and grass resources into nutritious food for humans without using human-edible resources. Evaluating on-going national sustainability initiatives in the livestock sector is key to determine if circularity elements are already represented and to identify new opportunities and pathways for the future. In this paper we synthetize the environmental actions promoted by different initiatives driving the sustainable transformation of Colombian cattle production systems and assess the inclusion of circularity elements in these actions. The proposed environmental actions were concentrated in the conservation of remaining natural ecosystems, zero-deforestation and the sustainable intensification of cattle production through silvopastoral and paddock rotational systems. Circularity was addressed by some initiatives via the use organic fertilizers and the use of manure as fertilizers or feedstock for bioenergy generation. However, given that cattle farming is often practiced in low-input systems where the collection of by-products for reutilization (e.g., manure) is not always feasible, these actions are expected to have limited impact in the sector. Silvopastoral systems can positively promote circularity by creating the conditions for internal nutrient recycling via litterfall, biological nitrogen fixation, phosphorus solubilization, and presence of beneficial insects. However, to avoid food-feed competition and to remain circular, these should only be installed in agricultural areas unsuitable for crop production. In areas where crops can grow, other production systems that prioritize the production of plant biomass for human consumption (i.e., agrosilvopastoral systems, mixed croplivestock systems or forms of crop intercropping) should be considered.Productividad ganaderaSistemas agrosilvopastorilesGanadería sustentableRestauración ecológicaConservación de los recursos naturalesPLOS Climatehttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000074Acceso en línea sin restricciones