Actionable knowledge for ecological intensification of agriculture

W Geertsema, WAH Rossing, DA Landis… - Frontiers in Ecology …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
W Geertsema, WAH Rossing, DA Landis, FJJA Bianchi, PC Van Rijn, JHJ Schaminée…
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2016Wiley Online Library
Ecological intensification of agriculture (EI) aims to conserve and promote biodiversity and
the sustainable use of associated ecosystem services to support resource‐efficient
production. In many cases EI requires fundamental changes in farm and landscape
management as well as the organizations and institutions that support agriculture.
Ecologists can facilitate EI by engaging with stakeholders and, in the process, by generating
“actionable knowledge”(that is, knowledge that specifically supports stakeholder decision …
Ecological intensification of agriculture (EI) aims to conserve and promote biodiversity and the sustainable use of associated ecosystem services to support resource‐efficient production. In many cases EI requires fundamental changes in farm and landscape management as well as the organizations and institutions that support agriculture. Ecologists can facilitate EI by engaging with stakeholders and, in the process, by generating “actionable knowledge” (that is, knowledge that specifically supports stakeholder decision making and consequent actions). Using three case studies as examples, we propose four principles whereby science can improve the delivery of actionable knowledge for EI: (1) biodiversity conservation helps to ensure the delivery of ecosystem services, (2) management of ecosystem services benefits from a landscape‐scale approach, (3) ecosystem service trade‐offs and synergies need to be articulated, and (4) EI is associated with complex social dynamics involving farmers, governments, researchers, and related institutions. These principles have the potential to enhance adoption of EI, but institutional and policy challenges remain.
Wiley Online Library
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果