A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables

In the Colombian Amazon, cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) is often cultivated with limited productive, environmental, and cultural scopes, largely due to an insufficient understanding of the different types of cacao farmer. A multiple factor analysis of 200 cacao farms in the Putumayo region identified fi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Melo Zipacon, William Felipe, Taborda Lozada, Darlley Stiven, Blanco-Gutiérrez, Irené
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176213
_version_ 1855538993681137664
author Melo Zipacon, William Felipe
Taborda Lozada, Darlley Stiven
Blanco-Gutiérrez, Irené
author_browse Blanco-Gutiérrez, Irené
Melo Zipacon, William Felipe
Taborda Lozada, Darlley Stiven
author_facet Melo Zipacon, William Felipe
Taborda Lozada, Darlley Stiven
Blanco-Gutiérrez, Irené
author_sort Melo Zipacon, William Felipe
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In the Colombian Amazon, cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) is often cultivated with limited productive, environmental, and cultural scopes, largely due to an insufficient understanding of the different types of cacao farmer. A multiple factor analysis of 200 cacao farms in the Putumayo region identified five producer typologies based on qualitative and quantitative variables. Among them, Typology 3 consists mainly of Indigenous farmers (Indigenous with diversified agricultural productions), while Typology 1 includes both farmers and Indigenous people (Predominantly agriculture-oriented farmers). Typologies 2, 4, and 5 comprise peasants, Indigenous people, Afro-descendants, and mestizos. Typology 2 corresponds to Moderately agriculture-oriented peasants with a lower level of education than those in Typology 4, which represents Mixed moderately agriculture-oriented. Typology 5 includes Conservation-oriented farmers. These findings suggest that varying land-use orientations may play a key role in shaping cocoa farmer typologies. Understanding these farming typologies enables the development of policies and strategies tailored to each type of farmer. Moreover, this approach can be applied to other cacao-producing regions worldwide, offering a valuable framework for analysis in contexts with high cultural and ecological diversity. This study offers valuable insights that will help balance agricultural productivity with environmental sustainability, and contribute to an inclusive, resilient rural development.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace176213
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1762132025-11-11T19:05:31Z A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables Melo Zipacon, William Felipe Taborda Lozada, Darlley Stiven Blanco-Gutiérrez, Irené theobroma cacao agroforestry systems nature conservation landscape farm typology In the Colombian Amazon, cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) is often cultivated with limited productive, environmental, and cultural scopes, largely due to an insufficient understanding of the different types of cacao farmer. A multiple factor analysis of 200 cacao farms in the Putumayo region identified five producer typologies based on qualitative and quantitative variables. Among them, Typology 3 consists mainly of Indigenous farmers (Indigenous with diversified agricultural productions), while Typology 1 includes both farmers and Indigenous people (Predominantly agriculture-oriented farmers). Typologies 2, 4, and 5 comprise peasants, Indigenous people, Afro-descendants, and mestizos. Typology 2 corresponds to Moderately agriculture-oriented peasants with a lower level of education than those in Typology 4, which represents Mixed moderately agriculture-oriented. Typology 5 includes Conservation-oriented farmers. These findings suggest that varying land-use orientations may play a key role in shaping cocoa farmer typologies. Understanding these farming typologies enables the development of policies and strategies tailored to each type of farmer. Moreover, this approach can be applied to other cacao-producing regions worldwide, offering a valuable framework for analysis in contexts with high cultural and ecological diversity. This study offers valuable insights that will help balance agricultural productivity with environmental sustainability, and contribute to an inclusive, resilient rural development. 2025-10 2025-08-27T10:22:18Z 2025-08-27T10:22:18Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176213 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Melo Zipacon, W.F.; Taborda Lozada, D.S.; Blanco-Gutiérrez, I. (2025) A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables. Agroforestry Systems 99: 183. ISSN: 0167-4366
spellingShingle theobroma cacao
agroforestry systems
nature conservation
landscape
farm typology
Melo Zipacon, William Felipe
Taborda Lozada, Darlley Stiven
Blanco-Gutiérrez, Irené
A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
title A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
title_full A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
title_fullStr A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
title_full_unstemmed A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
title_short A typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the Amazon region of Colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
title_sort typological characterization of cocoa farmers in the amazon region of colombia based on biophysical and cultural variables
topic theobroma cacao
agroforestry systems
nature conservation
landscape
farm typology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176213
work_keys_str_mv AT melozipaconwilliamfelipe atypologicalcharacterizationofcocoafarmersintheamazonregionofcolombiabasedonbiophysicalandculturalvariables
AT tabordalozadadarlleystiven atypologicalcharacterizationofcocoafarmersintheamazonregionofcolombiabasedonbiophysicalandculturalvariables
AT blancogutierrezirene atypologicalcharacterizationofcocoafarmersintheamazonregionofcolombiabasedonbiophysicalandculturalvariables
AT melozipaconwilliamfelipe typologicalcharacterizationofcocoafarmersintheamazonregionofcolombiabasedonbiophysicalandculturalvariables
AT tabordalozadadarlleystiven typologicalcharacterizationofcocoafarmersintheamazonregionofcolombiabasedonbiophysicalandculturalvariables
AT blancogutierrezirene typologicalcharacterizationofcocoafarmersintheamazonregionofcolombiabasedonbiophysicalandculturalvariables