Multifunctional shade‐tree management in tropical agroforestry landscapes – a review
Teja Tscharntke,Yann Clough,Shonil A. Bhagwat,Damayanti Buchori,Heiko Faust,Dietrich Hertel,Dirk Hölscher,Jana Juhrbandt,Michael Kessler,Ivette Perfecto,Christoph Scherber,Götz Schroth,Edzo Veldkamp,Thomas C. Wanger,Thomas C. Wanger +14 more
TL;DR: The short-term and long-term ecological benefits of Shade trees in coffee Coffea arabica, C. canephora and cacao Theobroma cacao agroforestry are reviewed and the poorly understood, multifunctional role of shade trees for farmers and conservation alike is emphasized.
read more
Abstract: Summary 1. Agricultural intensification reduces ecological resilience of land-use systems, whereas paradoxically, environmental change and climate extremes require a higher response capacity than ever. Adaptation strategies to environmental change include maintenance of shade trees in tropical agroforestry, but conversion of shaded to unshaded systems is common practice to increase short-term yield. 2. In this paper, we review the short-term and long-term ecological benefits of shade trees in coffee Coffea arabica, C. canephora and cacao Theobroma cacao agroforestry and emphasize the poorly understood, multifunctional role of shade trees for farmers and conservation alike. 3. Both coffee and cacao are tropical understorey plants. Shade trees in agroforestry enhance functional biodiversity, carbon sequestration, soil fertility, drought resistance as well as weed and biological pest control. However, shade is needed for young cacao trees only and is less important in older cacao plantations. This changing response to shade regime with cacao plantation age often results in a transient role for shade and associated biodiversity in agroforestry. 4. Abandonment of old, unshaded cacao in favour of planting young cacao in new, thinned forest sites can be named ‘short-term cacao boom-and-bust cycle’, which counteracts tropical forest conservation. In a ‘long-term cacao boom-and-bust cycle’, cacao boom can be followed by cacao bust due to unmanageable pest and pathogen levels (e.g. in Brazil and Malaysia). Higher pest densities can result from physiological stress in unshaded cacao and from the larger cacao area planted. Risk-averse farmers avoid long-term vulnerability of their agroforestry systems by keeping shade as an insurance against insect pest outbreaks, whereas yield-maximizing farmers reduce shade and aim at short-term monetary benefits. 5. Synthesis and applications. Sustainable agroforestry management needs to conserve or create a diverse layer of multi-purpose shade trees that can be pruned rather than removed when crops mature. Incentives from payment-for-ecosystem services and certification schemes encourage farmers to keep high to medium shade tree cover. Reducing pesticide spraying protects functional
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
History of land status, land use and land cover types of four private oil palm plantations in West Kalimantan Province, Indonesia
Abstract: Oil palm plantations are still believed to be the principal reason of primary forests’ damages in Southeast Asia. To verify this accusation, a survey of four private oil palm plantations was carried out in West Kalimantan Province of Indonesia, to identify the history of land status, land cover types and land use prior to the conversion to these plantations. The research was conducted using overlay maps of Business Permit with Consensus-based Forest Land Use Planning/Provincial Spatial Plan maps and permits, interpretation of Landsat images of 3 years prior and 2 years after the establishment of the plantations. Interviews with various formal and informal community leaders were also conducted. Results indicated that the original land cover types of all of the research areas (100%) were not forest when the plantations were established. Most (59.50%), were formerly community lands, while 40.50% were concession areas belonging to other companies. These results corresponded with the Landsat imagery interpretations, which showed the land cover types 1 year before the conversion were mostly shrubs (59.62%), while the remaining were secondary swamp forest (18.35%), bare land (16.46%) and swamp shrubs (5.58%). This research confirmed that the four oil palm plantations, were not responsible for deforestation.
3
•Journal Article
Allelopathic activity and allelopathic substance in jackfruit leaves.
H. Kato-Noguchi,Y. Takami +1 more
TL;DR: Jackfruit leaves may be useful as soil additive materials to control weeds for sustainable agriculture and an allelopathic active substance was isolated.
3
Spatial Distribution of Citrus Pseudocercospora Leaf and Fruit Spot Disease and Shade Effect on Disease Intensity
Eunice Golda Danièle Ndo,Etienne Akoutou Mvondo,F. Bella Manga,Lucien Bidzanga Nomo,Christian Cilas +4 more
TL;DR: In this article , the effects of shade components on the incidence of Pseudocercospora (PLFSD) on 15-year-old tangerine trees in a cocoa-based agroforestry plot (Bokito) during four seasons.
•Dissertation
Shade trees in cacao agroforestry systems: influence on roots and net primary production
Abou Rajab,Yasmin Joana Monna +1 more
- 19 Sep 2016
TL;DR: This thesis aims to compare cacao agroforests with different shade intensities, focusing on above- and belowground biomass, carbon stocks and net primary production, as well as on vertical root distribution, fine root dynamics and the hydraulic-anatomical architecture of cacao and shade trees.
3
Fragmentation genetics of tropical tree species in an agro-forest landscape
Sascha A. Ismail
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: A comparison between mother trees in forest patches with low and high densities of adult trees shows that the frequency of short distance mating increases, as does average kinship among mates in low density stands, which indicates that there are potentially negative genetic consequences of low population density associated with forest fragmentation.
3
References
Global Consequences of Land Use
Jonathan A. Foley,Ruth DeFries,Gregory P. Asner,Carol C. Barford,Gordon B. Bonan,Stephen R. Carpenter,F. Stuart Chapin,Michael T. Coe,Michael T. Coe,Gretchen C. Daily,Holly K. Gibbs,Joseph H. Helkowski,Tracey Holloway,Erica A. Howard,Christopher J. Kucharik,Chad Monfreda,Jonathan A. Patz,I. Colin Prentice,Navin Ramankutty,Peter K. Snyder +19 more
TL;DR: Global croplands, pastures, plantations, and urban areas have expanded in recent decades, accompanied by large increases in energy, water, and fertilizer consumption, along with considerable losses of biodiversity.
Landscape perspectives on agricultural intensification and biodiversity – ecosystem service management
TL;DR: In this article, the negative and positive effects of agricultural land use for the conservation of biodiversity, and its relation to ecosystem services, need a landscape perspective, which is difficult to be found in the literature.
4.1K
Water Permeation Across Biological Membranes: Mechanism and Dynamics of Aquaporin-1 and GlpF
TL;DR: In this article, a real-time molecular dynamics simulation of water permeation through human aquaporin-1 and the bacterial glycerol facilitator GlpF is presented.
Climatic impact of tropical lowland deforestation on nearby montane cloud forests.
TL;DR: In this article, Landsat and Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite imagery show that deforested areas of Costa Rica's Caribbean lowlands remain relatively cloud-free when forested regions have well-developed dry season cumulus cloud fields.
1.1K
•Book
Agroforestry and biodiversity conservation in tropical landscapes.
Götz Schroth,G. A. B. da Fonseca,Celia A. Harvey,Claude Gascon,Heraldo L. Vasconcelos,A. M. N. Izac +5 more
- 16 Jul 2004
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the potential of agroforestry in tropical regions for making land economically productive without degrading the environment and found that agro-forestry can be the most biodiversity-friendly land use option.
862
Related Papers (5)
Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter,Michael Kessler,Jan Barkmann,Merijn M. Bos,Damayanti Buchori,Stefan Erasmi,Heiko Faust,Gerhard Gerold,Klaus Glenk,S. Robbert Gradstein,Edi Guhardja,Marieke Harteveld,Dietrich Hertel,Patrick Höhn,Martin Kappas,Stefan Köhler,Christoph Leuschner,Miet Maertens,Rainer Marggraf,Sonja Migge-Kleian,Johanis P. Mogea,Ramadhaniel Pitopang,Matthias Schaefer,Stefan Schwarze,Simone G. Sporn,Andrea Steingrebe,Sri S. Tjitrosoedirdjo,Soekisman Tjitrosoemito,André Twele,Robert J. Weber,Lars Woltmann,Manfred Zeller,Teja Tscharntke +32 more