Authors
Celia A Harvey, Alyssa A Pritts, Marie J Zwetsloot, Kees Jansen, Mirjam M Pulleman, Inge Armbrecht, Jacques Avelino, Juan F Barrera, Christian Bunn, Javier Hoyos García, Carlos Isaza, Juana Munoz-Ucros, Carlos J Pérez-Alemán, Eric Rahn, Valentina Robiglio, Eduardo Somarriba, Vivian Valencia
Publication date
2021/10
Source
Agronomy for sustainable development
Volume
41
Issue
5
Pages
62
Publisher
Springer Paris
Description
In Latin America, the cultivation of Arabica coffee (Coffea arabica) plays a critical role in rural livelihoods, biodiversity conservation, and sustainable development. Over the last 20 years, coffee farms and landscapes across the region have undergone rapid and profound biophysical changes in response to low coffee prices, changing climatic conditions, severe plant pathogen outbreaks, and other drivers. Although these biophysical transformations are pervasive and affect millions of rural livelihoods, there is limited information on the types, location, and extent of landscape changes and their socioeconomic and ecological consequences. Here we review the state of knowledge on the ongoing biophysical changes in coffee-growing regions, explore the potential socioeconomic and ecological impacts of these changes, and highlight key research gaps. We identify seven major land-use trends which are affecting the …
Total citations
20212022202320242312527
Scholar articles
CA Harvey, AA Pritts, MJ Zwetsloot, K Jansen… - Agronomy for sustainable development, 2021