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agroBIODIVERSITY Cross Cutting Network
2010-2011
Ph
oto
: F
. W
äck
ers
Co-chairs: Louise Jackson (UC Davis) & Lijbert Brussaard, IPO at Wageningen University
www.agroBIODIVERSITY-diversitas.org
About agroBIODIVERSITY
Revision of current models of agricultural production, biodiversity conservation & rural development are required to meet sustainability targets and maximize resilience and adaptive capacity in an uncertain future => AGROBIODIVERSITY FOR ECOLOGICAL INTENSIFICATION
This requires interdisciplinary science that addresses synergies and trade-offs between biodiversity conservation, agriculturalproduction and other ecosystem services in diverse social-ecological contexts
Highlights
• Keynotes at the European Agronomy Meetings. "Reconciling biodiversity conservation and food security" (LB) & “Biodiversity as a basis for agro-ecosystem functioning: investigating mechanisms at multiple scales” (LJ).• CCAFS (CGIAR-DIVERSITAS) joint planning workshop on “Filter and buffer functions provided by (agro)biodiversity & vulnerability/adaptation to climate change”. Identification of topics and research sites for collaboration (Nov. 2010, Mexico) • agroBIODIVERSITY core project: - Several joint research proposals (EUFP7, BiodivERsA)- Capacity building (shared PhD, MSc students)- Paper linking research at 8 agroBIODIVERSITY sites
The core research project at 8 study sites: Agrobiodiversity and intensification of agriculture;
insights from 8 landscapes in different biomes
Jackson et al (submitted).
Insights from 8 landscapes in different biomes; objectives
1. Conduct a global comparative analysis of relationships between livelihood resources (types of capital), biodiversity and ecosystem services
2. Identify viable biodiversity-based interventions and actions toward ecological intensification
3. Explore how global and local/regional knowledge can be coupled to guide actions that increase biodiversity-based management and ecological intensification.
Jackson et al (submitted).
Global network: 8 agricultural landscapes
Landscape-specific actions for functional agrobiodiversity, ecological intensification and improvement of livelihoods
Local/regional participatory research that synthesizes ecology, socioeconomics,
stakeholders and institutions
Types of participatory networks and social learning
Interventions for ecological intensification of agriculture
Classification of landscapes into socio-ecological domains
Domain A Domain B Domain C
Integrating global and regional
knowledge for long-
term provision of
multiple ecosystem
services
Jackson et al (submitted).
Highlights – Science/Policy
• Multi-stakeholder platform for exchange of knowledge • Joint project proposals (e.g. EU-COST), publications and events on FAB, targeted at farmers, policy makers, businesses and NGOs
www.ELN-FAB.eu
Directions for 2011
• Future work (2011-2013) will be focused on further data collection/integration at the sites. The IPO at Wageningen Univ. has appointed a researcher (Dr. Felix Bianchi). • Link synergies/trade-offs between biodiversity and food security to climate change mitigation/ adaptation in research and policies targeted at agricultural landscapes. • Strengthening collaborations with researchers in the field of geo-informatics, as well as the social sciences. • agroBIODIVERSITY SC meetings at Resilience Conference (March 2011) and in Bilbao (August 2011)
Ph
oto
: F
. W
äck
ers
www.agroBIODIVERSITY-diversitas.org
Conclusions
1. Three social-ecological domains were distinguished based on rapid indicators of different capital assets
2. Results guide further quantitative data collection and analysis to improve our understanding of drivers of land use change, especially re social and human capital.
3. Many of the priority interventions for ‘ecological intensification’ were common within (or across) the social-ecological domains, illustrating the scope for knowledge sharing.
4. Other priority interventions related to climate vulnerability / adaptation to climate change
5. The results emphasize the importance of landscape scale interventions and these were considered to depend strongly on human and social assets.
The core research project at 8 study sites:
Plot Farm Community Landscape Across landscapes
8 individual sites
*Field-based assessments
Integration across disciplines and scales
Synthesis & cross-site comparison **
Development of concepts and methodological approaches
Stakeholder involvement