Monday, 7 November 2005 - 8:35 AM
37-2

Agroforestry for Sustainability of Lower-Input and Resource-Limited Land-Use Systems.

Ramachandran P. K. Nair, University of Florida, Univ. Of FL-118 Newins-Ziegler, Gainesville, FL 32611-0410

Agriculture and forestry are too often treated separately, yet these two sectors are often interwoven on the landscape and share many common goals. The age-old practice of growing crops and trees together was ignored or bypassed in the single-commodity paradigm of agricultural and forestry development. Thanks to 25 years of efforts, agroforestry – the integration of multipurpose trees into farming systems – has now become a robust, science-based, integrated discipline. Agroforestry offers a unique set of opportunities for alleviating poverty and arresting land degradation, and providing ecosystem services in both low-income- and industrialized nations. These practices are particularly suitable for resource-limited conditions and lower-input situations, which cover an estimated 1.9 billion hectares of land and 800 million people in developing countries.

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Back to The ASA-CSSA-SSSA International Annual Meetings (November 6-10, 2005)