Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia

Cash crops are developing in the once forested areas of Indonesia in parallel with market and economic improvements. Perennial crops such as coffee, cocoa, and rubber were first planted in estates by private or public companies. Local people then integrated these crops into their farming systems, of...

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Main Authors: Feintrenie, L., Schwarze, S., Levang, P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20640
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author Feintrenie, L.
Schwarze, S.
Levang, P.
author_browse Feintrenie, L.
Levang, P.
Schwarze, S.
author_facet Feintrenie, L.
Schwarze, S.
Levang, P.
author_sort Feintrenie, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cash crops are developing in the once forested areas of Indonesia in parallel with market and economic improvements. Perennial crops such as coffee, cocoa, and rubber were first planted in estates by private or public companies. Local people then integrated these crops into their farming systems, often through the planting of agroforests, that is, intercropping the new cash crop with upland rice and food crops. The crop was generally mixed with fruit trees, timber, and other useful plants. A geographic specialization occurred, driven by biophysical constraints and market opportunities, with expansion of cocoa in Sulawesi, coffee in Lampung, and natural rubber in eastern Sumatra. However, during the past three decades, these agroforests have increasingly been converted into more productive monoculture plantations. A common trajectory can be observed in agricultural landscapes dominated by a perennial cash crop: from ladang to agroforests, and then to monoculture plantations. This process combines agricultural expansion at the expense of natural forests and specialization of the land cover at the expense of biodiversity and wildlife habitats. We determined the main drivers of agricultural expansion and intensification in three regions of Indonesia based on perception surveys and land use profitability analysis. When the national and international contexts clearly influence farmers’ decisions, local people appear very responsive to economic opportunities. They do not hesitate to change their livelihood system if it can increase their income. Their cultural or sentimental attachment to the forest is not sufficient to prevent forest conversion
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spelling CGSpace206402025-01-24T14:20:40Z Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia Feintrenie, L. Schwarze, S. Levang, P. livelihoods agricultural adjustment intensification agroforestry cocoa (plant) coffee agroforestry oil palms rubber land use tropical forests ecology Cash crops are developing in the once forested areas of Indonesia in parallel with market and economic improvements. Perennial crops such as coffee, cocoa, and rubber were first planted in estates by private or public companies. Local people then integrated these crops into their farming systems, often through the planting of agroforests, that is, intercropping the new cash crop with upland rice and food crops. The crop was generally mixed with fruit trees, timber, and other useful plants. A geographic specialization occurred, driven by biophysical constraints and market opportunities, with expansion of cocoa in Sulawesi, coffee in Lampung, and natural rubber in eastern Sumatra. However, during the past three decades, these agroforests have increasingly been converted into more productive monoculture plantations. A common trajectory can be observed in agricultural landscapes dominated by a perennial cash crop: from ladang to agroforests, and then to monoculture plantations. This process combines agricultural expansion at the expense of natural forests and specialization of the land cover at the expense of biodiversity and wildlife habitats. We determined the main drivers of agricultural expansion and intensification in three regions of Indonesia based on perception surveys and land use profitability analysis. When the national and international contexts clearly influence farmers’ decisions, local people appear very responsive to economic opportunities. They do not hesitate to change their livelihood system if it can increase their income. Their cultural or sentimental attachment to the forest is not sufficient to prevent forest conversion 2010 2012-06-04T09:15:02Z 2012-06-04T09:15:02Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20640 en Feintrenie, L., Schwarze, S., Levang, P. 2010. Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia . Ecology and Society 15 (4) :37. ISSN: 1708-3087.
spellingShingle livelihoods
agricultural adjustment
intensification
agroforestry
cocoa (plant)
coffee agroforestry
oil palms
rubber
land use
tropical forests
ecology
Feintrenie, L.
Schwarze, S.
Levang, P.
Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia
title Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia
title_full Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia
title_fullStr Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia
title_short Are local people conservationists? Analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in Indonesia
title_sort are local people conservationists analysis of transition dynamics from agroforests to monoculture plantations in indonesia
topic livelihoods
agricultural adjustment
intensification
agroforestry
cocoa (plant)
coffee agroforestry
oil palms
rubber
land use
tropical forests
ecology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20640
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