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Demystifying the Role of Agroforestry in Biodiversity Conservation Mohamed I Bakarr ICRAF’s Scientific Renewal Seminar Series
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Page 1: Bakarr 2 2006 29th september

Demystifying the Role of Agroforestry in Biodiversity Conservation

Mohamed I Bakarr

ICRAF’s Scientific Renewal Seminar Series

Page 2: Bakarr 2 2006 29th september

Creates livelihood options for poor farmers and their families in conservation landscapes

‘Agroforest’ forms of tree crop production form a matrix that matters for conservation of biodiversity

Principles can be applied in landscape approaches to biodiversity conservation

Agroforestry….

…..needs to be mainstreamed.

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Why mainstream agroforestry in biodiversity

conservation?

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Global Biodiversity Conservation

• The message is clear and consistent --– Maintaining representative networks of natural

habitats – Protected Areas– Eliminate threats to species– Sustainable use of natural resources– Access and benefit sharing

• But, the extent to which we are integrating these efforts in broader landscapes remains questionable

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Agroforestry and Biodiversity Conservation

• Agroforestry contributes to biodiversity conservation through three major pathways:1. Reducing pressure on natural forests,

2. Providing habitat for native plant and animal species, and

3. Serving as a benign matrix land use for fragmented landscapes

Schroth et al. 2004

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Fragmentation is deleterious

Loss of habitat results in:– wildlife population

declines– local “extinctions” --

particularly large mammals

– Increased in marginalized habitats

Miss Waldron’s Red Colobus, aWest African endemic believed to be extinct across its range.

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• Edge effects can be pronounced by “harshness” of the matrix == > – incidence of fires --

changes in biotic and abiotic features

– exotic and invasive species

• Receding edges lead to increased impoverishment of the habitat interior

Fragmentation causes forest edges to recede

Gascon et al. 2000

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The Future of Biodiversity is in Landscape-scale approaches

• Livelihood options for local people – top priority in forest management and conservation

• Effective linkages between protected areas and other land use practices – “beyond boundaries”

• Innovations in land use practices to create alternative sources of income

• Opportunities to recognize and reward land use innovations (e.g. payments for environmental services)

• Participatory processes for integrated natural resource management

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Landscape-scale Conservation• Integrating the

management of:– Protected Areas– Watersheds – Degraded forests– Farms and Plantations

• To accommodate:– Species and habitat

conservation needs– Ecological processes– Effects of biophysical

changes such as climate – Traditional or

subsistence livelihood practices

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The science and practice of agroforestry embodies several

conservation principles that are amenable to landscape

approaches

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Principle 1:

Maintaining genetic diversity of exploited species through in situ

and ex situ conservation

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Domestication of high value indigenous trees

1. Product development

2. Business development

3. Marketing

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Principle 2:

Protecting biodiversity and enhancing ecological

processes

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‘Shade coffee’ supports diversity of avifauna in the landscape.

Agroforestry for Biodiversity: ‘Shade’ coffee

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AF in the Humid Tropics & C Stocks

100

0

100

200

300

400Primary Forest

Managed forest

Tree-based systems

Crops, Pastures, Grasslands

Vegetation Carbon

Soil Carbon(M

g h

a(M

g h

a-1-1))

From ASB Climate Change Working Group,Palm et al.

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Principle 3:

Management and conservation of belowground biodiversity

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Tephrosia candidaTephrosia candida fallow: Nutrient fallow: Nutrient Cycling by: Leaf Litter; BNF; Deep Cycling by: Leaf Litter; BNF; Deep capturecapture

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Principle 4:

Improvement and sustainable management of landscapes for

livelihoods and biodiversity

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Improved fallows

Grass fallow

Improved fallow

continuous cropping

Poor yields

Improved yields

Miombo woodlands

Clearing

NPK Fertilizer

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Fencing is a major cause of deforestation in drier areas.

Live fences are alternatives to dead fences—limit tree clearance—and are sources of income .

LIVE FENCES

Jatropha

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Harvey et al. 2005

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Rotational Woodlots Acacia species yield approx 100t/ha after 5 years

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Principle 5:

Addressing livelihood needs in the margins of conservation areas

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Effective management of protected buffer zones to reduce encroachment

e.g. ICRAF’s work in Philippines

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How can Agroforestry be mainstreamed in Biodiversity

Conservation?

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Option 1

• Linking agroforestry science to landscape conservation planning– targeting agroforestry

innovations for habitat connectivity

– landscape reclamation or restoration

– improving land productivity and habitat quality for wild species  

Strategic alliances with mainstream conservation NGOs

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Option 2

• Use of INRM approaches for defining livelihood priorities and tree-based options in conservation landscapes – Tradeoff analysis in the forest margins (e.g.

ASB Matrix)– Negotiation support systems for conflict

management– Collective action for improved natural

resource management (e.g. Landcare)

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Option 3

• Engaging conservation biologists in the science and practice of agroforestry – defining biodiversity targets – analyzing metapopulation

dynamics – mitigating impacts of climate

change – types of trees, spatial

configurations of trees, densities of trees

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Option 4

• Expanding the range of agroforestry options offered to farmers to enhance conservation values– enhance the use of

multiple species of trees, especially indigenous species,to diversify production landscapes

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Option 5• Harnessing and

maintaining complex agroforestry systems for biodiversity conservation – rewards and incentive

mechanisms for poor farmers engaged in conservation-friendly practices (e.g. shade coffee, rubber agroforests)

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Option 6• Promoting more

systematic studies of species interactions and ecological processes in agroforestry systems – understanding the risks of

invasiveness for alien tree species

– habitat use by wild species, including corridors

– watershed management

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Option 7• Integrating agroforestry into

Conservation Biology Curricula, with topics such as:– Domestication of high value tree species– Managing trees for improved landscapes– Managing trees to mitigate the effects of biophysical

changes – Integrating trees in landscapes to enhance environmental

services– Assessing and rewarding environmental stewardship in

agroecosystems– Value-adding for tree-based practices to create options for

improved livelihoods in conservation areas

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Option 8• Linking agroforestry science to global and

regional environmental policy process– Millennium Ecosystem Assessment

endorsement – major achievement!– CBD Programmes of Work on agricultural

biodiversity; Global Strategy for Plant Conservation

– UNCCD – reversing land degradation in the drylands

– UNFCCC – climate change adaptation and mitigation; clean development mechanism

– NEPAD Environment Initiative

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Implications for ICRAF’s ‘Emerging Science’

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Emerging Science? (1)• Are we putting agroforests or agroforestry

systems into landscape contexts? – Value-adding options for linking “farms” at

landscape scale – Restoration or recovery of degraded lands– Optimizing land use practices for native

biodiversity (plants, animals)– Optimizing land use practices to mitigate

alien invasives– Climate change adapation

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Emerging Science? (2)

• How does agroforests or agroforestry systems influence landscape scale patterns/processes and vice versa? – Hydrological processes - watersheds– Agroforestry “stepping stones” as biological

corridors – Erosion control on slopes– Climate change mitigation - Carbon

sequestration

Mainly SE Asia, some work in Western Kenya

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Strategic Alliances• ICRAF-CIFOR Biodiversity Platform

– Understanding tropical landscape mosaics to improve livelihoods and conserve biodiversity

• ICRAF-CI Hotspots Alliance– Science for climate change adaptation, habitat

recovery and sustainable livelihoods in tropical hotspots and high biodiversity wilderness areas

• ICRAF-WWF Carbon Alliance– Delivering cost-effective greenhouse gas emission

reductions, while promoting biodiversity conservation, sustainable land use and improvements in rural livelihoods