Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas
Agroforestry Systems
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Agroforestry Systems is an international scientific journal that publishes results of novel, high impact original research, critical reviews and short communications on any aspect of agroforestry. The journal particularly encourages contributions that demonstrate the role of agroforestry in providing commodity as well non-commodity benefits such as ecosystem services. Papers dealing with both biophysical and socioeconomic aspects are welcome. These include results of investigations of a fundamental or applied nature dealing with integrated systems involving trees and crops and/or livestock. Manuscripts that are purely descriptive in nature or confirmatory in nature of well-established findings, and with limited international scope are discouraged. To be acceptable for publication, the information presented must be relevant to a context wider than the specific location where the study was undertaken, and provide new insight or make a significant contribution to the agroforestry knowledge base.Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Science-Life Sciences-Agroforestry
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde abr. 1997 / hasta dic. 2023 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0167-4366
ISSN electrónico
1572-9680
País de edición
Australia
Fecha de publicación
1982-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Characterization of teak pruning waste as an energy resource
Juan José Pérez Arévalo; Borja Velázquez Martí
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 241-250
Stakeholders’ engagement platform to identify sustainable pathways for the development of multi-functional agroforestry in Guadeloupe, French West Indies
Carla Barlagne; Marie Bézard; Emilie Drillet; Arnaud Larade; Jean-Louis Diman; Gisèle Alexandre; Arsène Vinglassalon; Maria Nijnik
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Social innovation is critical in shaping human-forest relationships and how farmers and scientists engage with each other to design sustainability transitions. This paper reports on the outputs of a participatory stakeholders’ engagement platform that was designed to draw on local farmers’ knowledge and experience in identifying sustainable pathways for the development of multi-functional agroforestry in Guadeloupe. Two participatory workshops were organised that aimed to gain insights into the reality faced by farmers, in particular: (i) their vision of the future, needs and aspirations; (ii) their understanding of barriers and enablers in relation to the sustainability challenges they are confronted with and; (iii) their framing of human–environment relationships in socio-ecological systems. Outputs of the activities were synthetized by the research team and represented graphically for analysis. Results show that while farmers envision prosperous multifunctional forest farms in the future, they have to face complex challenges that require solutions at multiple scales and suggest different types of innovation: social, institutional, market-based and technical. Farmers saw themselves as being part of the socio-ecological system and as custodians of the natural environment. We discuss the implications of those results in the context of the absence of a system of innovation for agroforestry in Guadeloupe and highlight the opportunity for a innovation ecosystem thinking approach that integrates better the agricultural and forestry sectors, but also between actors and scales of governance. Implementation of a <jats:italic>Stewardship status</jats:italic> would enable farmers achieve their vision and embrace a custodian role vis-à-vis the agroforest. Embededment of the stakeholders’ engagement platform and its enabling processes in the innovation ecosystem is key to achieve those objectives.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. No disponible
Introduction to the special issue “scaling up of agroforestry innovations: enhancing food, nutrition and income security”
Josiane Seghieri; Isabelle Droy; Kiros Hadgu; Frank Place
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 1245-1249
Farmers’ perception on the benefits and constraints of Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration and determinants of its adoption in the southern groundnut basin of Senegal
Baba Ansoumana Camara; Diaminatou Sanogo; Ousmane Ndiaye; Pape Bilal Diahate; Moussa Sall; Halimatou Sadyane Ba; Mouhamadou Diop; Marcel Badji
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. No disponible
Correction to: Micro-nutrient pools and their mobility in relation to land-use system in a cold high altitude Himalayan mountainous region
Sandeep Sharma; Pritpal Singh; Padma Angmo; S. S. Dhaliwal
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 1413-1414
Correction to: Who ate my chocolate? Small mammals and fruit damage in cacao agroforestry
Camila Righetto Cassano; Vanessa Araújo Rios; Fernanda Amato Gaiotto
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 1427-1427
Impacts of traditional agroforestry practices, altitudinal gradients and households’ wealth status on perennial plants species composition, diversity, and structure in south-central Ethiopia
Eyob Tadesse; Mesele Negash; Zebene Asfaw
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 1533-1561
Biomass, carbon stocks estimation and predictive modeling in mango based land uses on degraded lands in Indian Sub-Himalayas
Avinash Chandra Rathore; Harsh Mehta; Sadikul Islam; P. L. Saroj; N. K. Sharma; J. Jayaprakash; A. K. Gupta; R. K. Dubey; B. N. Ghosh; Ram Prasad; Dinesh Kumar; A. Raizada
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 1563-1575
Eucalyptus benthamii Maiden et Cambage growth and wood density in integrated crop-livestock systems
Silvano Kruchelski; Jonathan William Trautenmüller; Leonardo Deiss; Rômulo Trevisan; Frederick Cubbage; Vanderley Porfírio-da-Silva; Anibal de Moraes
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 1577-1588