Climate-smart perennial systems

Although coffee is a promising cash crop, smallholder farmers that grow coffee are still vulnerable. Soil fertility is declining, pest and disease pressure is increasing, populations are rising, and land is continuously fragmented. Above all, climate change is starting to take its toll and puts furt...

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Autores principales: Jassogne, Laurence T.P., Asten, Piet J.A. van, Läderach, Peter R.D., Craparo, S., Wanyama, I., Nibasumba A, Bielders, Charles L.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/41949
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author Jassogne, Laurence T.P.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Läderach, Peter R.D.
Craparo, S.
Wanyama, I.
Nibasumba A
Bielders, Charles L.
author_browse Asten, Piet J.A. van
Bielders, Charles L.
Craparo, S.
Jassogne, Laurence T.P.
Läderach, Peter R.D.
Nibasumba A
Wanyama, I.
author_facet Jassogne, Laurence T.P.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Läderach, Peter R.D.
Craparo, S.
Wanyama, I.
Nibasumba A
Bielders, Charles L.
author_sort Jassogne, Laurence T.P.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Although coffee is a promising cash crop, smallholder farmers that grow coffee are still vulnerable. Soil fertility is declining, pest and disease pressure is increasing, populations are rising, and land is continuously fragmented. Above all, climate change is starting to take its toll and puts further pressure on the coffee-based farming systems directly, because temperature and rainfall have an impact on the physiology of Arabica coffee, and indirectly because the incidence and severity of certain pests and diseases such as the coffee berry borer and coffee leaf rust will increase.
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spelling CGSpace419492024-03-06T10:16:43Z Climate-smart perennial systems Jassogne, Laurence T.P. Asten, Piet J.A. van Läderach, Peter R.D. Craparo, S. Wanyama, I. Nibasumba A Bielders, Charles L. agriculture climate coffee Although coffee is a promising cash crop, smallholder farmers that grow coffee are still vulnerable. Soil fertility is declining, pest and disease pressure is increasing, populations are rising, and land is continuously fragmented. Above all, climate change is starting to take its toll and puts further pressure on the coffee-based farming systems directly, because temperature and rainfall have an impact on the physiology of Arabica coffee, and indirectly because the incidence and severity of certain pests and diseases such as the coffee berry borer and coffee leaf rust will increase. 2011 2014-08-15T12:13:11Z 2014-08-15T12:13:11Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/41949 en Open Access Jassogne L, Van Asten P, Laderach P, Craparo S, Wanyama I, Nibasumba A, Bielders C. 2011. Climate-smart perennial systems. IITA Research for Development Review 9: 12-16.
spellingShingle agriculture
climate
coffee
Jassogne, Laurence T.P.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Läderach, Peter R.D.
Craparo, S.
Wanyama, I.
Nibasumba A
Bielders, Charles L.
Climate-smart perennial systems
title Climate-smart perennial systems
title_full Climate-smart perennial systems
title_fullStr Climate-smart perennial systems
title_full_unstemmed Climate-smart perennial systems
title_short Climate-smart perennial systems
title_sort climate smart perennial systems
topic agriculture
climate
coffee
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/41949
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AT astenpietjavan climatesmartperennialsystems
AT laderachpeterrd climatesmartperennialsystems
AT craparos climatesmartperennialsystems
AT wanyamai climatesmartperennialsystems
AT nibasumbaa climatesmartperennialsystems
AT bielderscharlesl climatesmartperennialsystems