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Registro Completo |
Biblioteca(s): |
Embrapa Acre; Embrapa Agrossilvipastoril. |
Data corrente: |
23/05/2017 |
Data da última atualização: |
07/02/2018 |
Tipo da produção científica: |
Artigo em Periódico Indexado |
Autoria: |
GARRETT, R. D.; NILES, M. T.; GIL, J. D. B.; GAUDIN, A.; CHAPLIN-KRAMER, R.; ASSMANN, A.; ASSMANN, T. S.; BREWERM, K.; CARVALHO, P. C. de F.; CORTNER, O.; DYNES, R.; GARBACHK, K.; KEBREAB, E.; MUELLER, N.; PETERSON, C.; REIS, J. C. dos; SNOW, V.; VALENTIM, J. F. |
Afiliação: |
Boston University; University of Vermont; Boston University / Wageningen University; University of California; Stanford University; Agricultural Institute of Paraná; Federal University of Technology-Paraná; University of California; Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS); Boston University; AgResearch; Point Blue Conservation Science; University of California; University of California; University of California; JULIO CESAR DOS REIS, CPAMT; AgResearch; JUDSON FERREIRA VALENTIM, CPAF-Acre. |
Título: |
Social and ecological analysis of commercial integrated crop livestock systems: Current knowledge and remaining uncertainty. |
Ano de publicação: |
2017 |
Fonte/Imprenta: |
Agricultural Systems, Amsterdam, v. 155, p. 136-146, July 2017. |
DOI: |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2017.05.003 |
Idioma: |
Inglês |
Conteúdo: |
Crops and livestock play a synergistic role in global food production and farmer livelihoods. Increasingly, however, crops and livestock are produced in isolation, particularly in farms operating at the commercial scale. It has been suggested that re-integrating crop and livestock systems at the field and farm level could help reduce the pollution associated with modern agricultural production and increase yields. Despite this potential, there has been no systematic review to assess remaining knowledge gaps in both the social and ecological dimensions of integrated crop and livestock systems (ICLS), particularly within commercial agricultural systems. Based on a multi-disciplinary workshop of international experts and additional literature review, we assess the current knowledge and remaining uncertainties about large-scale, commercial ICLS and identify the source of remaining knowledge gaps to establish priorities for future research. We find that much is understood about nutrient flows, soil quality, crop performance, and animal weight gain in commercial ICLS, but there is little knowledge about its spatial extent, animal behavior or welfare in ICLS, or the tradeoffs between biodiversity, pest and disease control, greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation, and drought and heat tolerance in ICLS. There is some evidence regarding the economic outcomes in commercial ICLS and supply chain and policy barriers to adoption, but little understanding of broader social outcomes or cultural factors influencing adoption. Many of these knowledge gaps arise from a basic lack of data at both the field and system scales, which undermines both statistical analysis and modeling efforts. Future priorities for the international community of researchers investigating the tradeoffs and scalability of ICLS include: methods standardization to better facilitate international collaborations and comparisons, continued social organization for better data utilization and collaboration, meta-analyses to answer key questions from existing data, the establishment of long term experiments and surveys in key regions, a portal for citizen science, and more engagement with ICLS farmers. MenosCrops and livestock play a synergistic role in global food production and farmer livelihoods. Increasingly, however, crops and livestock are produced in isolation, particularly in farms operating at the commercial scale. It has been suggested that re-integrating crop and livestock systems at the field and farm level could help reduce the pollution associated with modern agricultural production and increase yields. Despite this potential, there has been no systematic review to assess remaining knowledge gaps in both the social and ecological dimensions of integrated crop and livestock systems (ICLS), particularly within commercial agricultural systems. Based on a multi-disciplinary workshop of international experts and additional literature review, we assess the current knowledge and remaining uncertainties about large-scale, commercial ICLS and identify the source of remaining knowledge gaps to establish priorities for future research. We find that much is understood about nutrient flows, soil quality, crop performance, and animal weight gain in commercial ICLS, but there is little knowledge about its spatial extent, animal behavior or welfare in ICLS, or the tradeoffs between biodiversity, pest and disease control, greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation, and drought and heat tolerance in ICLS. There is some evidence regarding the economic outcomes in commercial ICLS and supply chain and policy barriers to adoption, but little understanding of broader social outcomes or cultural fa... Mostrar Tudo |
Palavras-Chave: |
Agricultura sustentable; Crop-livestock systems; Desempeño animal; Integração lavoura-pecuária; Investigación agraria; Planificación de investigación; Rendimiento de los cultivos; Sistemas de cultivo y ganadería. |
Thesagro: |
Agricultura sustentável; Pesquisa pecuária; Produção animal; Produção vegetal; Programa de pesquisa; Rendimento; Sociologia rural. |
Thesaurus Nal: |
Agricultural research; Animal performance; Crop yield; Research planning; Rural sociology; Sustainable agriculture. |
Categoria do assunto: |
L Ciência Animal e Produtos de Origem Animal |
Marc: |
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Registro original: |
Embrapa Agrossilvipastoril (CPAMT) |
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7. |  | CARNEIRO, H. C. F.; TONON, R. V.; GROSSO, C. R. F.; HUBINGER, M. D. Avaliação de diferentes combinações de materiais de parede na microencapsulação de óleo de linhaça por spray drying. In: SIMPÓSIO DE CIÊNCIA E TECNOLOGIA DE ALIMENTOS, 3.; CONGRESSO DO INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE FRUTAS TROPICAIS, 2.; SEMINÁRIO DE CIÊNCIA DE ALIMENTOS, 4., 2011, Recife. [Anais...] Recife: sbCTA, 2011.Tipo: Artigo em Anais de Congresso |
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