Supporting and regulating ecosystem services in cacao agroforestry systems

被引:0
作者
Róisín Mortimer
Stéphane Saj
Christophe David
机构
[1] ISARA Lyon (Member of the University of Lyon),Department of Agroecology and Environment
[2] CIRAD,undefined
[3] UMR System,undefined
来源
Agroforestry Systems | 2018年 / 92卷
关键词
Biodiversity conservation; Carbon storage; Landscape connectivity; Nutrient cycling; Pest and disease control; Trade-offs;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Cacao agroforestry systems (CAFS) can provide supporting services such as optimum light conditions for cacao growth, water and nutrient cycling and regulating services such as pest and disease control and climate regulation. This review considers recent literature on the manifestation of these services in CAFS around the world to provide an overview of scientific knowledge. Crown structures of associated trees can facilitate optimum light conditions for cacao growth, and provide water through vertical root segregation. Leaf litter fall and roots from associated species contribute to nutrient cycling. Both nitrogen-fixing and non-nitrogen-fixing species can provide nutrients to the cacao plant, though competition from certain species may limit phosphorus and potassium uptake. Pest and disease regulating services can arise through careful shade management to create a microclimate which reduces susceptibility of cacao to fungal diseases and sun-loving pests. All CAFS store carbon to varying degrees; those resembling original forest much more than simple two-species systems from which shade trees are removed after maturity of the cacao stand. CAFS also promotes biodiversity conservation depending on structure, management, and landscape arrangement, though not to the extent of natural forests. Research opportunities to increase provision of these services include optimal spatial arrangement for nutrient cycling and functional diversity as well as landscape connectivity for biodiversity conservation. Trade-offs between carbon storage, biodiversity, cacao yield and socio-economic resilience are presented, indicating that optimization of ecosystem services in CAFS requires consideration of interactions between all services, including socio-cultural and economic ones.
引用
收藏
页码:1639 / 1657
页数:18
相关论文
共 459 条
[61]  
Cassano CR(2012)Profitability and implications of cocoa intensification on carbon emissions in Southern Cameroun Ecol Indic 16 2237-2244
[62]  
Silva RM(2013)A novel, integrated method for management of witches’ broom disease in cacao in Bahia, Brazil Agrofor Syst 50 199-241
[63]  
Mariano-Neto E(2017)Relationships between invertebrate communities, litter quality and soil attributes under different cacao agroforestry systems in the south of Bahia, Brazil Int J Agr Sustain 20 1175-1190
[64]  
Schroth G(2012)Response of cacao trees ( Biodivers Conserv 21 67-80
[65]  
Faria D(2016)) to a 13-month desiccation period in Sulawesi, Indonesia Exp Agric 16 1515-1530
[66]  
Chumacero de Schawe CC(2007)Agroecosystem management in the 21st century: it is time for a paradigm shift Biodivers Conserv 73 219-231
[67]  
Kessler M(2000)Diversity and spatial clustering of shade trees affect cacao yield and pathogen pressure in Costa Rican agroforests Agrofor Syst 8 1047-1066
[68]  
Hensen I(2015)Carbon stocks in shaded Theobroma cacao farms and adjacent secondary forests of similar age in Cameroon Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 78 323-328
[69]  
Tscharntke T(2016)Biodiversity conservation in tropical agroecosystems: a new conservation paradigm Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang 173 46-57
[70]  
Clough Y(2010)Analysis of ecosystem services trade-offs to design agroecosystems with perennial crops Glob Chang Biol 16 2385-2400