Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?

Agroforestry systems provide ecosystem services, on which adaptation to climate change could increasingly rely. In Mesoamerica, under a tropical wet climate, coffee-based agroforestry can maintain supporting and regulating services such as drought resistance, soil formation and flood regulation, that help facing extreme rainfall events. However, under conditions of global market fluctuations and weak policy support, coffee-based tropical agroforestry systems (AFS) are abandoned or imperiled by the extension of pasture and sugarcane areas. These land use changes also threaten biodiversity in biological corridors (BC) where protected areas are connected by AFS, as in the Costa Rican Central Volcanic ? Talamanca BC. In its Balalaica subcorridor delimited by two rivers and crossed by a mountainous spine, local stakeholders and a pluridisciplinary research team aim at understanding the dynamics of land use change affecting AFS and the mechanisms at work. On the basis of the Resilience Assessment guide with emphasis on existing knowledge, either local or scientific, an historical profile and two threshold cascades were built in a two-step process: initial results obtained out of available literature, were then revised during working sessions with stakeholders and academic experts. Three scales were considered: the focal system Balalaica; its farms at the smaller scale; Costa Rica at the larger one. The historical profile was constructed over a century, and specified for the last 30 years. It illustrates the combined effects that recurrent coffee crises and new national regulations have had at the farm level, where the creation and the bankruptcies of agricultural transformation units was determinant. Successive development phases could be identified that characterize the Balalaica subcorridor within the national context and correspond to different phases of several adaptive cycles. The threshold cascades propose a conceptual model on how ecological or economic disturbances at the national scale affect the profitability of coffee plantation in the subcorridor, which lowers the economic importance of coffee for households and the cultural identity felt towards it, leading to land use changes and their ecological consequences, mainly soil degradation with pasture and connectivity loss with sugarcane. Bound this way, each phenomenon gets more irreversible. Reconsidering the concept of adaptive cycle allows to complete the analysis of coffee agroforestery resilience and to question the transformability of this type of socio-ecological system at the farm and plot scale. Fluctuations in coffee and sugarcane areas are interpreted as resulting from two connected adaptive cycles; a same plot moving from one cycle to the other and back after some years. Such type of land use change has recently became a more irreversible conversion to sugarcane, and we found that alternative practices in coffee plantations interact with this transformation. Doing so, we identified four alternative adaptation trajectories of coffee farms to exogenous disturbances. This analysis highlights a possible progressive adaptation of coffee systems to an almost nontransformable state of abandoned coffee plantation, that is highly resilient. The result questions traditional views on agroforestry systems among researchers and prompts more reflection about potential traps induced by passive adaptation processes in perennial cropping systems. (Texte integral)

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Main Authors: Eychène, Coline, Fallot, Abigaïl, Meija, Nelson, Rapidel, Bruno, Le Coq, Jean-François, Botta, Aurélie
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe
Subjects:F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture, K10 - Production forestière,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/1/document_573572.pdf
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id dig-cirad-fr-573572
record_format koha
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
K10 - Production forestière
F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
K10 - Production forestière
spellingShingle F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
K10 - Production forestière
F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
K10 - Production forestière
Eychène, Coline
Fallot, Abigaïl
Meija, Nelson
Rapidel, Bruno
Le Coq, Jean-François
Botta, Aurélie
Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
description Agroforestry systems provide ecosystem services, on which adaptation to climate change could increasingly rely. In Mesoamerica, under a tropical wet climate, coffee-based agroforestry can maintain supporting and regulating services such as drought resistance, soil formation and flood regulation, that help facing extreme rainfall events. However, under conditions of global market fluctuations and weak policy support, coffee-based tropical agroforestry systems (AFS) are abandoned or imperiled by the extension of pasture and sugarcane areas. These land use changes also threaten biodiversity in biological corridors (BC) where protected areas are connected by AFS, as in the Costa Rican Central Volcanic ? Talamanca BC. In its Balalaica subcorridor delimited by two rivers and crossed by a mountainous spine, local stakeholders and a pluridisciplinary research team aim at understanding the dynamics of land use change affecting AFS and the mechanisms at work. On the basis of the Resilience Assessment guide with emphasis on existing knowledge, either local or scientific, an historical profile and two threshold cascades were built in a two-step process: initial results obtained out of available literature, were then revised during working sessions with stakeholders and academic experts. Three scales were considered: the focal system Balalaica; its farms at the smaller scale; Costa Rica at the larger one. The historical profile was constructed over a century, and specified for the last 30 years. It illustrates the combined effects that recurrent coffee crises and new national regulations have had at the farm level, where the creation and the bankruptcies of agricultural transformation units was determinant. Successive development phases could be identified that characterize the Balalaica subcorridor within the national context and correspond to different phases of several adaptive cycles. The threshold cascades propose a conceptual model on how ecological or economic disturbances at the national scale affect the profitability of coffee plantation in the subcorridor, which lowers the economic importance of coffee for households and the cultural identity felt towards it, leading to land use changes and their ecological consequences, mainly soil degradation with pasture and connectivity loss with sugarcane. Bound this way, each phenomenon gets more irreversible. Reconsidering the concept of adaptive cycle allows to complete the analysis of coffee agroforestery resilience and to question the transformability of this type of socio-ecological system at the farm and plot scale. Fluctuations in coffee and sugarcane areas are interpreted as resulting from two connected adaptive cycles; a same plot moving from one cycle to the other and back after some years. Such type of land use change has recently became a more irreversible conversion to sugarcane, and we found that alternative practices in coffee plantations interact with this transformation. Doing so, we identified four alternative adaptation trajectories of coffee farms to exogenous disturbances. This analysis highlights a possible progressive adaptation of coffee systems to an almost nontransformable state of abandoned coffee plantation, that is highly resilient. The result questions traditional views on agroforestry systems among researchers and prompts more reflection about potential traps induced by passive adaptation processes in perennial cropping systems. (Texte integral)
format conference_item
topic_facet F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
K10 - Production forestière
author Eychène, Coline
Fallot, Abigaïl
Meija, Nelson
Rapidel, Bruno
Le Coq, Jean-François
Botta, Aurélie
author_facet Eychène, Coline
Fallot, Abigaïl
Meija, Nelson
Rapidel, Bruno
Le Coq, Jean-François
Botta, Aurélie
author_sort Eychène, Coline
title Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
title_short Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
title_full Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
title_fullStr Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
title_sort assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin central america: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations?
publisher Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/1/document_573572.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5735722019-03-09T17:10:08Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/ Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations? Eychène Coline, Fallot Abigaïl, Meija Nelson, Rapidel Bruno, Le Coq Jean-François, Botta Aurélie. 2014. In : Resilience and development: mobilising for transformation. Villeurbanne : Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe, Résumé, 60-61. Resilience Alliance 2014, Montpellier, France, 4 Mai 2014/8 Mai 2014. Researchers Assessing the resilience of agroforestrysystemsin Central America: what do we learn about the transformabilityof coffee plantations? Eychène, Coline Fallot, Abigaïl Meija, Nelson Rapidel, Bruno Le Coq, Jean-François Botta, Aurélie eng 2014 Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe Resilience and development: mobilising for transformation F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture K10 - Production forestière Agroforestry systems provide ecosystem services, on which adaptation to climate change could increasingly rely. In Mesoamerica, under a tropical wet climate, coffee-based agroforestry can maintain supporting and regulating services such as drought resistance, soil formation and flood regulation, that help facing extreme rainfall events. However, under conditions of global market fluctuations and weak policy support, coffee-based tropical agroforestry systems (AFS) are abandoned or imperiled by the extension of pasture and sugarcane areas. These land use changes also threaten biodiversity in biological corridors (BC) where protected areas are connected by AFS, as in the Costa Rican Central Volcanic ? Talamanca BC. In its Balalaica subcorridor delimited by two rivers and crossed by a mountainous spine, local stakeholders and a pluridisciplinary research team aim at understanding the dynamics of land use change affecting AFS and the mechanisms at work. On the basis of the Resilience Assessment guide with emphasis on existing knowledge, either local or scientific, an historical profile and two threshold cascades were built in a two-step process: initial results obtained out of available literature, were then revised during working sessions with stakeholders and academic experts. Three scales were considered: the focal system Balalaica; its farms at the smaller scale; Costa Rica at the larger one. The historical profile was constructed over a century, and specified for the last 30 years. It illustrates the combined effects that recurrent coffee crises and new national regulations have had at the farm level, where the creation and the bankruptcies of agricultural transformation units was determinant. Successive development phases could be identified that characterize the Balalaica subcorridor within the national context and correspond to different phases of several adaptive cycles. The threshold cascades propose a conceptual model on how ecological or economic disturbances at the national scale affect the profitability of coffee plantation in the subcorridor, which lowers the economic importance of coffee for households and the cultural identity felt towards it, leading to land use changes and their ecological consequences, mainly soil degradation with pasture and connectivity loss with sugarcane. Bound this way, each phenomenon gets more irreversible. Reconsidering the concept of adaptive cycle allows to complete the analysis of coffee agroforestery resilience and to question the transformability of this type of socio-ecological system at the farm and plot scale. Fluctuations in coffee and sugarcane areas are interpreted as resulting from two connected adaptive cycles; a same plot moving from one cycle to the other and back after some years. Such type of land use change has recently became a more irreversible conversion to sugarcane, and we found that alternative practices in coffee plantations interact with this transformation. Doing so, we identified four alternative adaptation trajectories of coffee farms to exogenous disturbances. This analysis highlights a possible progressive adaptation of coffee systems to an almost nontransformable state of abandoned coffee plantation, that is highly resilient. The result questions traditional views on agroforestry systems among researchers and prompts more reflection about potential traps induced by passive adaptation processes in perennial cropping systems. (Texte integral) conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573572/1/document_573572.pdf application/pdf Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html