Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes

Commodity crop expansion, for both global and domestic urban markets, follows multiple land change pathways entailing direct and indirect deforestation, and results in various social and environmental impacts. Here we compare six published case studies of rapid commodity crop expansion within forest...

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Main Authors: Meyfroidt, Patrick, Carlson, K.M., Fagan, Matthew E., Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo, Macedo, M.N, Curran, L, DeFries, Ruth S., Dyer, G.A., Gibbs, H.K, Lambin, E.F., Morton, D.C, Robiglio, Valentina
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: IOP Publishing 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94139
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author Meyfroidt, Patrick
Carlson, K.M.
Fagan, Matthew E.
Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Macedo, M.N
Curran, L
DeFries, Ruth S.
Dyer, G.A.
Gibbs, H.K
Lambin, E.F.
Morton, D.C
Robiglio, Valentina
author_browse Carlson, K.M.
Curran, L
DeFries, Ruth S.
Dyer, G.A.
Fagan, Matthew E.
Gibbs, H.K
Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Lambin, E.F.
Macedo, M.N
Meyfroidt, Patrick
Morton, D.C
Robiglio, Valentina
author_facet Meyfroidt, Patrick
Carlson, K.M.
Fagan, Matthew E.
Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Macedo, M.N
Curran, L
DeFries, Ruth S.
Dyer, G.A.
Gibbs, H.K
Lambin, E.F.
Morton, D.C
Robiglio, Valentina
author_sort Meyfroidt, Patrick
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Commodity crop expansion, for both global and domestic urban markets, follows multiple land change pathways entailing direct and indirect deforestation, and results in various social and environmental impacts. Here we compare six published case studies of rapid commodity crop expansion within forested tropical regions. Across cases, between 1.7% and 89.5% of new commodity cropland was sourced from forestlands. Four main factors controlled pathways of commodity crop expansion: (i) the availability of suitable forestland, which is determined by forest area, agroecological or accessibility constraints, and land use policies, (ii) economic and technical characteristics of agricultural systems, (iii) differences in constraints and strategies between small-scale and large-scale actors, and (iv) variable costs and benefits of forest clearing. When remaining forests were unsuitable for agriculture and/or policies restricted forest encroachment, a larger share of commodity crop expansion occurred by conversion of existing agricultural lands, and land use displacement was smaller. Expansion strategies of large-scale actors emerge from context-specific balances between the search for suitable lands; transaction costs or conflicts associated with expanding into forests or other state-owned lands versus smallholder lands; net benefits of forest clearing; and greater access to infrastructure in already-cleared lands. We propose five hypotheses to be tested in further studies: (i) land availability mediates expansion pathways and the likelihood that land use is displaced to distant, rather than to local places; (ii) use of already-cleared lands is favored when commodity crops require access to infrastructure; (iii) in proportion to total agricultural expansion, large-scale actors generate more clearing of mature forests than smallholders; (iv) property rights and land tenure security influence the actors participating in commodity crop expansion, the form of land use displacement, and livelihood outcomes; (v) intensive commodity crops may fail to spare land when inducing displacement. We conclude that understanding pathways of commodity crop expansion is essential to improve land use governance.
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spelling CGSpace941392025-06-17T08:24:02Z Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes Meyfroidt, Patrick Carlson, K.M. Fagan, Matthew E. Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo Macedo, M.N Curran, L DeFries, Ruth S. Dyer, G.A. Gibbs, H.K Lambin, E.F. Morton, D.C Robiglio, Valentina land use crop production tropical forests Commodity crop expansion, for both global and domestic urban markets, follows multiple land change pathways entailing direct and indirect deforestation, and results in various social and environmental impacts. Here we compare six published case studies of rapid commodity crop expansion within forested tropical regions. Across cases, between 1.7% and 89.5% of new commodity cropland was sourced from forestlands. Four main factors controlled pathways of commodity crop expansion: (i) the availability of suitable forestland, which is determined by forest area, agroecological or accessibility constraints, and land use policies, (ii) economic and technical characteristics of agricultural systems, (iii) differences in constraints and strategies between small-scale and large-scale actors, and (iv) variable costs and benefits of forest clearing. When remaining forests were unsuitable for agriculture and/or policies restricted forest encroachment, a larger share of commodity crop expansion occurred by conversion of existing agricultural lands, and land use displacement was smaller. Expansion strategies of large-scale actors emerge from context-specific balances between the search for suitable lands; transaction costs or conflicts associated with expanding into forests or other state-owned lands versus smallholder lands; net benefits of forest clearing; and greater access to infrastructure in already-cleared lands. We propose five hypotheses to be tested in further studies: (i) land availability mediates expansion pathways and the likelihood that land use is displaced to distant, rather than to local places; (ii) use of already-cleared lands is favored when commodity crops require access to infrastructure; (iii) in proportion to total agricultural expansion, large-scale actors generate more clearing of mature forests than smallholders; (iv) property rights and land tenure security influence the actors participating in commodity crop expansion, the form of land use displacement, and livelihood outcomes; (v) intensive commodity crops may fail to spare land when inducing displacement. We conclude that understanding pathways of commodity crop expansion is essential to improve land use governance. 2014-07-01 2018-07-03T10:57:01Z 2018-07-03T10:57:01Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94139 en Open Access IOP Publishing Meyfroidt , P., Carlson, K.M., Fagan, M.E., Gutierrez-Velez, V.H., Macedo, M.N., Curran, L., DeFries, R.S., Dyer, G.A., Gibbs, H.K., Lambin, E.F., Morton, D.C., Robiglio, V. . 2014. Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes Environmental Research Letters, 9 (7) : 074012. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/9/7/074012
spellingShingle land use
crop production
tropical forests
Meyfroidt, Patrick
Carlson, K.M.
Fagan, Matthew E.
Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Macedo, M.N
Curran, L
DeFries, Ruth S.
Dyer, G.A.
Gibbs, H.K
Lambin, E.F.
Morton, D.C
Robiglio, Valentina
Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
title Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
title_full Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
title_fullStr Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
title_short Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
title_sort multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes
topic land use
crop production
tropical forests
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94139
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