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Chapter 22 - Payment for Unmarketed Agroecosystem Services as a Means to Promote Agricultural Diversity: An Examination of Agricultural Policies and Issues

This chapter examines payment for unmarketed agroecosystem services as a means to promote agricultural diversity as well as payment for agricultural diversity as a way to increase the supply of wanted unmarketed agroecosystem services. The importance of treating agricultural diversity as a multidimensional concept is emphasized, and several of its dimensions are identified. After assessing generally policies for paying farmers for the supply of unmarketed agroecosystem services, particular attention is given to payments for on-farm product diversity as a means of sustaining or increasing the supply of desired unmarketed agroecosystem services. The importance of this diversification being integrated to achieve this end is stressed. Economic theory (despite its limitations) is shown to be helpful in identifying issues that need to be addressed when considering policies for paying farmers for their supply of agroecosystem services, for example, the importance of distinguishing the allocative and income distribution effects of such policies. The analysis of these matters is facilitated by the introduction of a simple social cost-benefit inequality and a specific economic model. The importance of taking account of public administration costs and legal barriers and their efficiency aspects when assessing the costs and benefits of agricultural policies is stressed because these aspects are frequently overlooked. Other relevant aspects of agricultural diversity, such as regional diversity, are also briefly examined. An alternative to paying farmers for the supply of wanted agroecosystem services is to penalize them for not doing so. This is examined. The prospect of greater agricultural diversity resulting in the short term in reduced supply of agricultural products (and an increase in their real prices) but a more sustainable supply of these products in the long term is raised.

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Chapter 9 - Can Silvoarable Systems Maintain Yield, Resilience, and Diversity in the Face of Changing Environments?

This chapter discusses biophysical processes that explain the ability of silvoarable agroforestry systems to maintain agricultural yields while providing a range of ecosystem services. Silvoarable systems are very flexible, and many management practices can be used within them by farmers to sustain crop yields for as long as possible. These include the choice of tree and crop species, tree row orientation, tree row spacing, tree-thinning regimes, tree-pruning intensity, hedging of canopies, soil cultivation methods, and cover cropping. Tree roots do compete with crops, but they can also provide a “safety net” under crops to intercept nutrients and form symbioses with N-fixing or mycorrhizal organisms. Trees share light, water, and nutrients with crops, but competition can be minimized by ensuring increased resource use efficiency of the whole system. Trees increase the water-holding capacity of agricultural soils and contribute to the reduction and management of floodwaters. They influence climate at micro, meso, and macro scales and provide opportunities for climate change mitigation and adaption. At some silvoarable spacings, the arable crops will have to be replaced for the latter part of the tree rotation with pasture. These silvoarable systems then become silvopastoral (or agro-silvi-pastoral) in nature, and they are best suited to areas where mixed farming exists or can be reintroduced. The chapter's emphasis is primarily on temperate regions.

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Chapter 28 - Current and Potential Contributions of Organic Agriculture to Diversification of the Food Production System

Organic agriculture is a system that aims to primarily use ecologic processes rather than external inputs to manage crops and livestock. Diversity is a key component of natural ecosystems and organic agriculture often includes the use of diversity as a management paradigm, as well as the stated goal to enhance diversity. But how does organic agriculture contribute to diversification in practice? And what are the potentials and limits of organic agriculture to enhance the diversity of the food production system? In this chapter, we will examine the evidence for implementation of diversification practices by organic farmers, as well for the diversification outcomes of organic agriculture. We will then conclude with a discussion and outlook on how organic agriculture can enhance the diversification of agroecosystems and the food system in general. On the one hand, large-scale economic drivers today typically favor the homogenization of food production systems, and organic agriculture—being a production system that is embedded in the existing food system—is thus faced with limits in its ability to foster diversification at the system level. On the other hand, multiple drivers, including climate change but also the increased importance of consumers in the food system, may alter the dominant socioeconomic drivers and may favor more resilient organic or organic-like production systems in the future. Organic agriculture may thus provide important contributions for a trajectory for moving toward more diversified food production, not only through diversification occurring within organic systems, but also by providing important lessons on diversified agricultural systems for conventional agriculture.

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Chapter 5 - Negative Impacts on the Environment and People From Simplification of Crop and Livestock Production

Many negative impacts on our environment and us are partly attributable to contemporary simplified, intensive agriculture, which frequently and problematically functions within national economic systems where social and environmental effects are not reflected in market values. Specialization of farms and farming regions have increased many environmental problems including greater reductions in air and water quality, less availability of water, more soil degradation, and more biodiversity losses. Greater negative effects on our environment are probably due to interlinkages among specialization, intensification, and enlargement of farms driven by industrialization and globalization of markets and may have been exacerbated by public policies such as Common Agriculture Policy in the European Union and national farm legislation the United States such as the federal crop insurance program. This approach to farming has also created concerns about food quality and human health. Potential negative effects on people include unhealthful working conditions in concentrated animal feeding operations, excessive exposure to pesticides, development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, increasing exposure to steroid hormones associated with exogenous steroid growth promoters for livestock, increasing the risk of pandemic avian and swine influenza, increasing exposure to excessive levels of nitrates in drinking water, decreasing micronutrient availability in foods, as well as reduced availability of affordable healthful foods such as fruits and vegetables, and increasing stress on farming families.

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Chapter 12 - The Future of Sustainable Crop Protection Relies on Increased Diversity of Cropping Systems and Landscapes

The homogenization of agroecosystems through the loss of genetic diversity between and within crops, increased dependency on fewer crop protection products, and loss of seminatural features such as field boundaries threatens the sustainability of current crop protection strategies. The loss of crop diversity has selected for a narrow range of weed, pathogen, and pest species adapted to the small number of major crops currently being grown on a large scale. This, together with legislative restrictions on pesticide availability, has led to overreliance on a few chemical active ingredients, creating strong selection pressure for the evolution of pesticide resistance that is now a major agronomic issue in intensive agricultural systems. Examples include glyphosate-resistant palmer amaranth in US GM herbicide-tolerant crops, herbicide-resistant black-grass in NW Europe, triazole-resistant Septoria in UK wheat, and European populations of cabbage stem flea beetle in oilseed rape that are no longer controlled by synthetic pyrethroids. In parallel with the evolution of resistance, the increased use of pesticides and loss of noncropped habitats have also depleted populations of the natural enemies of crop pests or predators of weed seeds that we rely on to regulate outbreaks of pests, pathogens, or weeds. As a consequence, when the efficacy of the chemistry begins to decrease, we can no longer rely on predator-prey feedback dynamics that would ordinarily regulate the system. In this chapter, using examples and data from the literature and recent projects, we will demonstrate the necessity for increased diversity of crops, management, and landscapes as a framework for future, sustainable crop protection strategies.

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