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The Argentinian experience with yerba mate in agroforestry
Resumen
Climate change mitigation and food security are two of the main challenges in today’s societies. Agroforestry — defined as the presence of trees on cropland, as external and internal boundaries and on any other available niche of farmland — can provide both food and climate change mitigation. As an agroecosystem that combines trees with farming practices, agroforestry has the potential to increase both biomass and soil carbon while maintaining
[ver mas...]
Climate change mitigation and food security are two of the main challenges in today’s societies. Agroforestry — defined as the presence of trees on cropland, as external and internal boundaries and on any other available niche of farmland — can provide both food and climate change mitigation. As an agroecosystem that combines trees with farming practices, agroforestry has the potential to increase both biomass and soil carbon while maintaining agricultural production (Cardinael et al. 2017). There are several types of agroforestry systems, with different rates of above-ground and soil carbon sequestration (Corbeels et al. 2019).
Agroforestry also contributes to water quality improvement, biodiversity enhancement, erosion control and nutrient cycling and availability (Dordel 2009; Varah et al. 2013)
[Cerrar]
Fuente
Tropical Forest Issues 62 : 84-88. (February 2024)
Fecha
2024-02-01
Editorial
Tropenbos International
ISSN
2958-4426
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Abierto
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)