Back

19_10_2017, Lucas A. Garibaldi

19_10_2017, Lucas A. Garibaldi

Uploaded by ebddsa dsa, 23/10/17 10:23
crop pollination, and multi-dimentional landscapes. Resumen: Concerns regarding the ecological footprint of conventionally intensified agriculture are global. Ecological intensification, or the improvement of crop yield through enhancement of biodiversity, may be a sustainable pathway toward greater food supplies. Such sustainable increases may be especially important for the 2 billion people reliant on small farms, many of which are undernourished, yet we know little about the efficacy of this approach. Using a coordinated protocol across regions and crops, we quantify to what degree enhancing pollinator density and richness can improve yields on 344 fields from 33 pollinator-dependent crop systems in small and large farms from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. For fields less than 2 hectares, we found that yield gaps could be closed by a median of 24% through higher flower-visitor density. For larger fields, such benefits only occurred at high flower-visitor richness. Worldwide, our study demonstrates that ecological intensification can create synchronous biodiversity and yield outcomes.
Tags: seminarios ebd
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first.

Version 1.0

Last Updated by ebddsa dsa
23/10/17 10:23
Status: Approved
crop pollination, and multi-dimentional landscapes. Resumen: Concerns regarding the ecological footprint of conventionally intensified agriculture are global. Ecological intensification, or the improvement of crop yield through enhancement of biodiversity, may be a sustainable pathway toward greater food supplies. Such sustainable increases may be especially important for the 2 billion people reliant on small farms, many of which are undernourished, yet we know little about the efficacy of this approach. Using a coordinated protocol across regions and crops, we quantify to what degree enhancing pollinator density and richness can improve yields on 344 fields from 33 pollinator-dependent crop systems in small and large farms from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. For fields less than 2 hectares, we found that yield gaps could be closed by a median of 24% through higher flower-visitor density. For larger fields, such benefits only occurred at high flower-visitor richness. Worldwide, our study demonstrates that ecological intensification can create synchronous biodiversity and yield outcomes.
Download (617.1MB) Get URL or WebDAV URL.
Version History
Version Date Size  
1.0 6 Years Ago 617.1MB