Principles of integrated agricultural systems: Introduction to processes and definition

被引:117
作者
Hendrickson, John R. [1 ]
Hanson, J. D. [1 ]
Tanaka, Donald L. [1 ]
Sassenrath, Gretchen [2 ]
机构
[1] USDA ARS, No Great Plains Res Lab, Mandan, ND 58554 USA
[2] Jamie Whitten Delta States Res Ctr, Applicat & Prod Technol Res Unit, Stoneville, MS 38776 USA
关键词
agricultural production systems; hierarchy; dynamic-integrated agricultural production systems;
D O I
10.1017/S1742170507001718
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Agriculture has been very successful in addressing the food and fiber needs of today's world population. However, there are increasing concerns about the economic, environmental and social costs of this success. Integrated agricultural systems may provide a means to address these concerns while increasing sustainability. This paper reviews the potential for and challenges to integrated agricultural systems, evaluates different agricultural systems in a hierarchical systems framework. and provides definitions and examples for each of the systems. This paper also describes the concept of dynamic-integrated agricultural systems and calls for the development of principles to use in developing and researching integrated agricultural systems. The concepts in this paper have arisen from the first in a series of planned workshops to organize common principles. criteria and indicators across physiographic regions in integrated agricultural systems. Integrated agricultural systems have multiple enterprises that interact in space and time, resulting In a synergistic resource transfer among enterprises. Dynamic-integrated agricultural systems have multiple enterprises managed in a dynamic manner. The key difference between dynamic-integrated agricultural systems and integrated agricultural systems is in management philosophy. In an integrated agricultural system, management decisions, Such as type and amount of commodities to produce. are predetermined. In a dynamic-integrated system, decisions are made at the most opportune time using the best available knowledge. We developed a hierarchical scheme for agricultural systems ranging from basic agricultural production systems. which are the simplest system with no resource flow between enterprises, to dynamic-integrated agricultural systems. As agricultural systems Move LIP in the hierarchy, their complexity, amount of management needed, and sustainability also increases. A key aspect of sustainability is the ability to adapt to future challenges. We argue that sustainable systems need built-in flexibility to achieve this goal.
引用
收藏
页码:265 / 271
页数:7
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