Sandhu, H. et al. (2016). Mainstreaming Ecosystem Services into Future Farming. Solutions 7(2): 40–47. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/mainstreaming-ecosystem-services-into-future-farming/
Feature
Mainstreaming Ecosystem Services into Future Farming by Harpinder Sandhu, Steve Wratten, John R. Porter, Robert Costanza, Jules Pretty, and John P. Reganold
Stefano Lubiana
Sheep are employed to graze on headland between rows of planted grapes on a vineyard in southern Tasmania.
In Brief Agriculture has made remarkable advances in fulfilling the food and nutritional requirement of expanding human numbers worldwide. There are several sustainable farming systems that contribute to overall biodiversity conservation and associated ecosystem services. Yet agricultural practices that have come to predominate since the second half of the 20th century have led to the overuse of fossil fuel-based inputs, unsustainable exploitation of natural resources, and loss of biodiversity. These outcomes also have high costs to human health and the environment. Continuing with largely energy-intense, wasteful, polluting, and unsustainable agriculture is no longer a viable option for future world food security and human well-being. There is an urgent need for forms of agricultural production that improve natural capital and ecosystem services (ES) in food systems worldwide. Mainstreaming ES into future agriculture requires protocols to replace some of the nonrenewable resources (e.g. fossil fuel-based pesticides and fertilizers) with renewable resources (ES such as biological control of insect pests or nitrogen fixation by legumes). The protocols presented here have been tested in different agricultural systems that enable farmland to simultaneously provide food and a range of ecosystem services. Recent research demonstrates that managed systems with these protocols exhibit higher economic value of ecosystem services. Thus, there is need to support the deployment of these protocols through various policy mechanisms for the long-term sustainability of agriculture. 40 | Solutions | March-April 2016 | www.thesolutionsjournal.org
A
lthough global policies to reduce poverty, ensure food security, and improve environmental protection are in place, a new paradigm shift is required to fast-track sustainable development.1 This requires a new vision in global efforts and contributions by all sectors of the global economy, including agriculture.2 The agricultural sector supports 45 percent of the global population as farmers, laborers, and agribusiness organizations and also contributes to the above global goals through the provision of ecosystem goods and services (ES) and by improving natural capital.3,4 It contributes on average approximately six percent to the global gross domestic product (GDP), ranging from only one percent in advanced economies to 40 percent in the least developed ones.5 Agriculture occupies approximately 38 percent of the global land area and houses the largest managed ecosystems on Earth.6 One way that agriculture can contribute to the global agenda of sustainable development is mainstreaming ES into current and future farming systems.7,8 This will ensure employment for large populations, improve food security, and deliver multifunctional landscapes benefitting not only farm communities but also society at large. Here, we propose that such a goal comprise sustainable intensification through the development of ES-providing and enhancing practices as part of modified farming systems.9,10 It will require payment mechanisms and market-based instruments to support the adoption of these ES-enhancing protocols.11 The latter need to be presented to farmers and advisors in a form that facilitates uptake.
Farmland Ecosystem Services and Productivity Ecosystem services on farmland need to be enhanced as part of global food policy as increasingly dysfunctional
biomes and ecosystems are appearing. Moreover, the agriculture, which largely created the problem, has become more intensive in terms of its enhanced use of nonrenewable resources, driven by consumption patterns of a world population likely to reach nine billion people by 2050.12 Therefore, the need for enhanced biodiversity-driven ES in global agriculture is urgent.
Key Concepts • Many current agricultural practices suppress vital ecosystem services (ES), thereby limiting the ability of agriculture to feed the increasing human population. • Sustainable intensification by deploying agroecological approaches can be used to enhance ES that can benefit agriculture to improve productivity. • Well-designed agricultural systems have the ability to increase the concurrent supply of ES and food production. • Agricultural policy needs to evaluate, enhance, and internalize the value of ES in food production systems for their long-term sustainability. • Reshaping of global agricultural goals is required in order to utilize biodiversity and ES to increase productivity, protect the environment, and contribute to human well-being.
Here, we show how simple agroecological approaches can be used to demonstrate that ES can benefit modern farming and be adopted to improve productivity. These involve agroecological experiments to measure ecosystem functions combined with value transfer techniques to calculate their economic value. These studies demonstrate that some current farming practices have much higher ES values than suggested in previous work.13 For example, recent data show
that the combined value of only two ES—nitrogen mineralization and biological control of a single pest by one guild of invertebrate predators—can have values of USD$197, $271, and $301 per hectare per year in terms of avoided costs for conventional,7 organic,14 and integrated (e.g. combining food and energy production, or CFE) arable farming systems,15 respectively. Conventional farming systems depend on high rates of synthetic inputs, such as pesticides and fertilizers, to control pests, maintain soil fertility along with improved seed, heavy machinery, and irrigation to produce maximum outputs per hectare.8 Organic agriculture is a production system that virtually excludes synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. It emphasizes on building up the soil with composts and green manures, managing pests using natural pest control and crop rotations.8 The CFE system is a production system which is a net energy producer and is managed organically. 15 It produces more energy in the form of renewable biomass than consumed in the planting, growing, and harvesting of the food and fodder. The bioenergy component is represented by belts of fast-growing trees (willows, alder, and hazel) that are planted orthogonally to fields that contain cereal and pasture crops. The total value of these two ES to global agriculture, if used on only 10 percent of total area, exceeds the combined cost of pesticides and fertilizers.8 The above values comprise reduced variable costs (labor, fuel, and pesticides) and lower external costs to human health and the environment. Although paying for these variable costs does contribute to GDP, it is a poor indicator of sustainability and of human well-being.16 Instead, the expenditure on cleaning up those externalities should be subtracted from the GDP. We think that a better understanding of ecological processes and their economic contribution in agroecosystems can help develop protocols,
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Vineyard management practices, such as growing strips of flowering buckwheat between vine rows, decrease the mean number of leafroller (Epiphyas postvittana) caterpillars in grape bunches in New Zealand. These practices help to keep the caterpillars below the economic threshold for managing them with pesticides. The strips of flowering buckwheat provide nectar for parasitoid wasps that attack grape-feeding caterpillars, which in turn leads to the pest population being brought below the economic threshold. A service providing unit (SPU; see text) has been developed for easy uptake of this protocol.
Jean-Luc Dufour, Accolade Wines
Vineyard with flowering buckwheat between vine rows at a winery in New Zealand.
which do not require major farming system changes, but enhance ES by returning selective functional agricultural biodiversity to agriculture.17 Functional agricultural biodiversity is defined as the biodiversity in and around agricultural landscapes that enhances ES and thereby benefits food production. In addition, it can facilitate sustainable intensification and have positive spin-offs for the society.9,10 For example, nutrient cycling, including the role of leguminous crops in nitrogen fixation, is a well-known enhancement of farmland ES and can have a value of USD$1200 per hectare per year.18,19 More recent ES improvements are illustrated by
agroecological research on biological control of insect pests. In New Zealand and Australia, strips of flowering buckwheat Fagopyrum esculentum (Moench) between vine rows provide nectar and other nutrients in an otherwise virtual monoculture, and thereby improve the ecological fitness and efficacy of parasitoid wasps that attack grapefeeding caterpillars (see box). This in turn leads to the pest population being brought below the economic threshold. An investment of USD$3 per hectare per year in buckwheat seed and minimal sowing costs have been shown to lead to savings in variable costs of USD$200 per hectare per year, fewer pesticide residues,20 and
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can aid the conservation of endemic butterfly species.21 Such protocols have been taken up by grape growers in New Zealand, as in the above case.20 However, for rapid adoption and uptake, further research is required to understand the full costs and benefits of such protocols for different farming systems.8,9,10 There are other examples of protocols not requiring a major farming system change. With biological control of weeds in Australia, returns on investment of up to 300:1 have been achieved following the introduction of appropriately selective biodiversity in the form of insects for weed biological control.22 In Africa, the development of ‘push-pull’ eco-technologies, whereby plant and insect chemistry is used to deter pests (‘push’) and attract pests’ natural enemies (‘pull’), has improved yields to such an extent that milk production has increased and benefits have been community-wide.23 Fungicide use in vines can also be avoided if such eco-technologies are deployed. The life cycle of botrytis (Botrytis cinerea) disease on grapes can be disrupted by the appropriate use of mulches below vines. The resulting enhanced ES in this case can save USD$570 per hectare per year in fungicide and associated costs.24
Scalability of Future Farming Although the eco-technologies now exist to improve farming sustainability when the negative consequences of a continued reliance of oil-based inputs are well recognized,17,25 farmers are commonly risk-averse.26 In industrialized countries, they have tended to reject the notion that noncrop biodiversity on their land can improve production and/or minimize costs. However, farmers in many developing countries tend to agree and utilize this farm biodiversity.9 The challenge now for agroecologists and policymakers is to use a range of market-based instruments or incentives, government interventions, and enhanced social learning among growers to accelerate the deployment of sound, biodiversitybased ES-enhancement protocols for farmers.26 These protocols need to be framed in the form of service-providing units,11 which precisely explain the necessary ES-enhancement procedures and should ideally include cost–benefit analyses. Such a requirement invites the design of new systems of primary production that are speciesdiverse, have low inputs, and provide a diverse suite of ES including a positive net carbon sequestration. A comparison of the economic values of ES associated with farming in organic, conventional, and a combined food and energy system indicate that well-designed agricultural systems have the potential to produce multiple ES in addition to food and fodder (see Figure 1).7,15 Any potential loss in farm income under these systems can be compensated with sound market mechanisms, such as payment for ecosystem services (PES) schemes and tax deductions.23 In this approach, those that benefit from the provision of ES make payments to those that supply them, thereby maintaining ES. Examples of informal functioning PES schemes in different areas of the world are summarized in Table 1. The current focus of these schemes is on water, carbon, and biodiversity in
addressing environmental problems through positive incentives to land managers.25 Such schemes not only help to improve the environment and human well-being but also ensure food security and long-term farm sustainability.2 For example, beetle banks on arable land in the European Union deliver vertebrate conservation ES, which builds on the original pest management intention of these banks.27
The Way Forward The extensive Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) of global ecosystems provided a framework for analyzing socio-ecological processes and suggested that agriculture may be the “largest threat to biodiversity and ecosystem function of any single human activity.”28 The MEA raised awareness of ecosystems and their services, but the global environment continues to degrade because of a lack
Harpinder Sandhu
Figure 1. Proportion of four different categories of ecosystem services provided by organic fields, conventional fields, and combined food and energy systems (CFE).7,15 Food and fodder production is included in provisioning services. Organic and conventional fields produce comparable provisioning services at the expense of regulating services and cultural services. However, CFE systems are able to balance food production and bio-energy production with minimizing impacts on regulating services and cultural services. Supporting services, such as nutrient cycling, pollination, and biological control of insect pests, which are necessary for the production of provisioning services, are also higher in CFE systems. www.thesolutionsjournal.org | March-April 2016 | Solutions | 43
Hanne Lipczak Jakobsen, Copenhagen University
A CFE system showing shelterbelts.
of any coherent plan of action. Recently, the United Nations established the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services to translate ecosystem science into action and to track the drivers and consequences of ecosystem change worldwide.29 This action plan is focused on strengthening assessment, relevant policy, and associated science at spatial and temporal scales. The United Nations has recently set up the global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to increase food production and to achieve food security and poverty alleviation by 2030, among other development goals.30 However, growing sufficient and nutritious food for nine billion plus people worldwide
by 2050 will need greater coherence in global efforts, partnerships with developed and developing countries, and careful planning and implementation of the required programs with science and policy collaboration. It also requires assessment and valuation of ES in agriculture to understand inter-dependencies and trade-offs between production and the environment, as advocated by The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity for Agriculture and Food, a project of the United Nations Environment Program.31 Achievement of human well-being as agreed by the SDGs is not possible without clear pathways for the design of future agroecosystems and new agricultural policies. Efforts
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to intensify agriculture since the 1960s partly succeeded due to technology transfer to farmers and support of and financial investments in agricultural research, extension networks, and governments at regional and national levels. Here, we provide some recommendations to the agricultural science, farming, and policy communities, which might be useful in shaping global agricultural goals by utilizing biodiversity and ES to increase productivity, protect the environment, and contribute to human well-being: • Global agriculture needs to embrace and implement the value of biodiversity and ES into farming. This requires designing farming
systems that can use ES through sustainable intensification, reduce or eliminate fossil fuel-based inputs to increase productivity, and enhance efficiencies of other inputs, such as water and nutrients. • Agroecology has potential to enhance productivity and farm sustainability through adoption of ES. Agricultural research should focus more on developing and refining agroecological techniques to enhance farmland ES, such as natural pest control, managing habitat for wild pollinators, increasing soil organic matter, and improving nutrient cycling, so that they can be integrated into the current farming systems. These techniques can also help improve vital natural capital in agriculture. • Social capital in agriculture that includes contributions from farmers and farming families should be acknowledged and rewarded by recognizing their value in achieving the SDGs. This can help future-proof farming and the livelihoods of millions of farmers. • The livelihood of farming communities should be protected by agricultural policy while developing long-term strategies for sustainable intensification. • Country level and global studies are required to estimate the value of all environmental benefits and costs of current and alternative agricultural systems. This economic valuation will provide policy makers with a tool that can guide policy development to incentivize ESenhancing agricultural practices and to penalize detrimental practices. • Current agricultural systems can be diverted toward sustainable intensification by governments developing and adopting appropriate policy responses at regional and national levels, matched by financial investments.
• Various UN efforts in tackling climate change and protecting biodiversity and ES should focus on the agriculture sector for positive spin-offs for the environment, economy, and society.32
15. Porter, J., R. Costanza, H. Sandhu, L. Sigsgaard, and S. Wratten. The value of producing food, energy and ecosystem services within an agro-ecosystem. Ambio 38 (2009): 186–93. 16. Kubiszewski, I. et al. Beyond GDP: Measuring and achieving global genuine progress, Ecological Economics 93 (2013): 57–68.
Achievement of human well-being as agreed by the SDGs is not possible without clear pathways for the design of future agroecosystems and new agricultural policies. 17. Gurr, G.M., S.D. Wratten, and M.A. Altieri (eds).
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3. Ecosystem Services in Agricultural and Urban Landscapes (eds Wratten, S., H. Sandhu, R. Cullen, and R. Costanza) (Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, 2013). 4. Fenichel, E.P. et al. Measuring the value of groundwater and other forms of natural capital. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 (2016): 2382–2387. 5. World Bank. Agriculture: value added (% of GDP) [online] (2015) http://data.worldbank.org. 6. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. FAOSTAT online database [online] (2016) http://faostat.fao.org/site/377/default.aspx#ancor. 7. Sandhu, H.S., S.D. Wratten, R. Cullen, and B. Case. The future of farming: the value of ecosystem services in conventional and organic arable land. An experimental approach. Ecological Economics 64 (2008): 835–848. 8. Sandhu, H. et al. Significance and value of non-traded ecosystem services on farmland. PeerJ 3, e762 (2015). 9. Pretty, J., C. Toulmin, and S. Williams. Sustainable intensification in African agriculture. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability 9 (2011): 5–24. 10. Pretty, J. and Z.P. Bharucha. Sustainable intensification in agricultural systems. Annals of Botany 114 (2014): 1571–96. 11. Luck, G.W., G.C. Daily, and P.R. Ehrlich. Population diversity and ecosystem services. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18 (2003): 331. 12. Foley, J.A. et al. Global consequences of land use. Science 309 (2005): 570–4.
inputs of biological nitrogen fixation in agricultural systems. Plant Soil 311 (2008): 1–18. 20. The Bio-Protection Research Centre, Sustainable bioprotection [online] (2009) www.bioprotection. org.nz. 21. Gillespie, M., S.D. Wratten, R. Cruickshank, B.H. Wiseman, and G.W. Gibbs. Incongruence between morphological and molecular markers in the butterfly genus Zizina (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae) in New Zealand. Systematic Entomology 38 (2013): 151–63. 22. Economic impact assessment of Australian weed biological control [online] (2009) http://www.weeds. crc.org.au/index_noflash.html. 23. International Association for the Plant Protection Sciences. ICIPE develops safe new methods for controlling stem borers, termites and striga. Crop Protection 20 (2001): 269–72. 24. Jacometti, M.A., S.D. Wratten, and M. Walter. Understorey management increases grape quality, yield and resistance to Botrytis cinerea. Agriculture Ecosystems & Environment 122 (2007): 349–56. 25. Food and Agriculture Organization. The State of Food and Agriculture: Paying Farmers for Environmental Services (FAO, Rome, 2007). 26. Warner, K.D. Extending agroecology: Grower participation in partnerships is key to social learning. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems 21 (2006): 84–94. 27. MacLeod, A., S.D. Wratten, N.W. Sotherton, and M.B.
13. Costanza, R. et al. The value of the world’s ecosystem services and natural capital. Nature 387
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Harpinder Sandhu
A conventional wheat field.
28. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Synthesis Report (Island Press, Washington, 2005). 29. Intergovernmental Platform for Biodiversity and
Conference of the Parties 21, Paris [online] (2015) http://www.cop21paris.org/. 33. Costa Rica–National Payment for Environmental Services (PES) programme. International Institute
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Costa_Rica_National_PES_eng.html. 34. Rewarding poor rural people for nurturing the land. Rural Poverty Portal, International Fund for Agricultural Development [online] (2012) http:// www.ruralpovertyportal.org/country/voice/tags/ china/rupes. 35. China–Sloping Lands Conversion Programme
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index.
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PES Scheme
Location
Ecosystem Services Provided
National PES Program33
Costa Rica
Functioning watersheds, carbon sequestration, aesthetics in the form of landscape attractiveness
Rewarding the Upland Poor for the Environmental Services (RUPES)34
The Philippines, Indonesia, and Nepal
Functioning watersheds
The Chinese Sloping Lands Conversion Program (SLCP)35
Yangtze and Yellow Rivers regions, China
Reduced flood risk
Madhya Pradesh Lake Conservation Authority36
India
Water quality improvement, organic agriculture support
Pro-Poor Rewards for Environmental Services in Africa (PRESA)37
Kenya and Tanzania
Watershed function, carbon capture, water quality improvement
Agri-Environmental Measures38
European Union
Environmentally favorable extensions of farming, management of lowintensity pasture systems, integrated farm management and organic agriculture, preservation of landscape and historical features, conservation of high-value habitats and their associated biodiversity, beetle banks
The US Conservation Reserve Program39
USA
Soil erosion reduction, water quality improvement, wildlife habitat enhancement
CFEES15
Denmark
Biological control of pests, nitrogen regulation, soil formation, carbon accumulation, hydrological flow, pollination, aesthetics
Table 1. Summary of key “payment for ecosystem services” (PES) schemes associated with agroecosystems. In these schemes, those that benefit from the provision of ES, such as consumers, make payments to those that supply the services, such as farmers, to improve the environment and human well-being. Such PES schemes not only help to improve the environment and human well-being but also ensure food security and long-term farm sustainability. www.thesolutionsjournal.org | March-April 2016 | Solutions | 47