scholarly journals Long-term dynamics of cocoa agroforestry systems established on lands previously occupied by savannah or forests

2019 ◽  
Vol 275 ◽  
pp. 100-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annemarijn Nijmeijer ◽  
Pierre-Eric Lauri ◽  
Jean-Michel Harmand ◽  
Gregoire T. Freschet ◽  
Jean-Daniel Essobo Nieboukaho ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 92 (5) ◽  
pp. 1185-1199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Jagoret ◽  
Didier Snoeck ◽  
Emmanuel Bouambi ◽  
Hervé Todem Ngnogue ◽  
Salomon Nyassé ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 1453
Author(s):  
Fred A. Yamoah ◽  
James S. Kaba ◽  
David Botchie ◽  
Joseph Amankwah-Amoah

Drawing on the awareness of consequence literature, this paper unpacks how the awareness of the consequences of full-sun cocoa production can encourage farmers to adopt shaded cocoa agroforestry that preserves the land and favours better cocoa farm waste management. Using Ghana as a case study, the paper provides distinctive insights on how shaded cocoa agroforestry systems provide sustainable yields in the medium- to long-term, relative to unshaded systems. We also find that cocoa farmers’ awareness of consequences about the effects of undertaking unshaded cocoa production could make individual farmers exhibit pro-environmental behaviour, leading to the adoption of cocoa agroforestry systems that help preserve soil fertility and improve waste management. We recommend that the utilization of awareness of consequence protocols, coupled with the efficient diffusion of information on the benefits of agroforestry in terms of waste management and environmental improvements to the cocoa farmers, could increase the adoption of shaded cocoa production regimes in Ghana.


Author(s):  
Christopher Hunt

Research during the late 20th and early 21st centuries found that traces of human intervention in vegetation in Southeast Asian and Australasian forests started extremely early, quite probably close to the first colonization of the region by modern people around or before 50,000 years ago. It also identified what may be insubstantial evidence for the translocation of economically important plants during the latest Pleistocene and Early Holocene. These activities may reflect early experiments with plants which evolved into agroforestry. Early in the Holocene, land management/food procurement systems, in which trees were a very significant component, seem to have developed over very extensive areas, often underpinned by dispersal of starchy plants, some of which seem to show domesticated morphologies, although the evidence for this is still relatively insubstantial. These land management/food procurement systems might be regarded as a sort of precursor to agroforestry. Similar systems were reported historically during early Western contact, and some agroforest systems survive to this day, although they are threatened in many places by expansion of other types of land use. The wide range of recorded agroforestry makes categorizing impacts problematical, but widespread disruption of vegetational succession across the region during the Holocene can perhaps be ascribed to agroforestry or similar land-management systems, and in more recent times impacts on biodiversity and geomorphological systems can be distinguished. Impacts of these early interventions in forests seem to have been variable and locally contingent, but what seem to have been agroforestry systems have persisted for millennia, suggesting that some may offer long-term sustainability.


2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 851-868 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annemarijn Nijmeijer ◽  
Pierre-Éric Lauri ◽  
Jean-Michel Harmand ◽  
Stéphane Saj

2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (6) ◽  
pp. 983-1000 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Jagoret ◽  
J. Kwesseu ◽  
C. Messie ◽  
I. Michel-Dounias ◽  
E. Malézieux

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