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<다양화된 농법이 유기농업과 관행농업의 수확량 격차를 줄인다>는 연구 결과. http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/cont…/…/1799/20141396

그러니까 유기농업이라면서 한두 가지 작물만 대량으로 생산하는 기존 관행농업의 방식을 따라서 하지 말고, 작부체계를 잘 세워서 다양한 작물을 재배하여 생산할 필요가 있다는 지적이겠습니다. 유기농업을 위시한 대안적인 농법에 냉소하고 콧방귀나 뀌지 말고, 그게 제대로 이루어질 수 있도록 더 많은 관심과 연구, 그리고 투자가 필요하단 이야기겠지요? 그런데 한국에서는... 농업 관계자들이 유기농업 그거 다 뻥이라는 소리나 하고 그러는 분위기이니 원.

요약: 오늘날 농업은 생물다양성, 토양, 물, 대기에 큰 부담을 주고 있으며, 이러한 부담은 인구 증가, 육류 및 에너지 소비, 음식물 쓰레기의 현재 추세가 계속된다면 더욱 악화될 것이다. 따라서 생산력이 높으면서 환경 피해를 최소화하는 농업 체계가 절실히 필요하다. 유기농업이 세계의 식량 생산에 어떻게 기여할 수 있는지는 지난 10년 동안 격렬한 논쟁의 대상이 되었다. 여기에서 우리는 유기농업 및 관행농업의 수확량을 이전에 활용된 것보다 3배 더 큰 새로운 메타데이터 세트(1000개 이상의 관측치를 포함하는 115개의 연구)와 비교하여 데이터의 이질성 및 구조를 더 잘 설명할 수 있는 새로운 계층적 분석틀을 다시 검토한다. 우리는 유기농업의 수확량이 관행농업의 수확량보다 19.2%(±3.7 %) 더 낮아서, 이전 추산치보다 수확량 격차가 더 작은 걸 발견했다. 더 중요한 건 이전 연구와 비교하여 수확량 차이에 대한 작물의 유형 및 관리 방법의 완전히 다른 영향을 발견했다는 것이다. 예를 들어, 콩과 대 비콩과 작물, 여러해살이 대 한해살이 또는 산업국 대 개발도상국의 수확량에 유의미한 차이가 없음을 발견했다. 그 대신 우리는 두 가지 다각화된 농법인 섞어짓기와 돌려짓기 등을 유기농업에만 적용했을 때 실질적으로 수확량 격차를 줄인다(각각 9±4%와 8±5%)는 새로운 결과를 발견했다. 더 큰 메타데이터 세트의 확고한 분석에 기초한 이러한 유망한 결과는 유기농업 관리 체계를 개선하기 위한 농업 연구에 적절한 투자가 이루어지면 일부 작물이나 지역의 수확량 격차를 크게 줄이거나 없앨 수 있음을 시사한다.

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샌프란시스코에서 남쪽으로 90마일 떨어진 왓슨빌에 있는 농장은 비틀즈의 히트곡 “Strawberry Fields Forever”에서 영감을 받은 것처럼 보일지 모른다. 겨울철에 긴 검은 비닐로 덮인 흙은 이듬해 딸기를 심을 두둑이다. 농민들은 여기를 클로로피크린 같은 화합물로 훈증소독한다. 이 물질은 미국 환경보호청과 캘리포니아 농약규제부에서 모두 대기오염 물질로 지정되어 있다.

이 지역에서는 딸기를 해마다 심기 때문에 딸기 재배농들은 딸기를 숙주로 삼는 verticilium 같은 토양 매개 균류 질병을 통제하고자 이런 물질에 의존하고 있다. 그러나 유기농 농부인 하비에르 자모라Javier Zamora 씨는 다른 전략을 취한다. 

“난 딸기를 심은 뒤에는 늘 다른 종류를 심어요”라고 한다. 그의 JSM 유기농 농장은 5년 만에 1800평에서 12만 평으로 확장했다. “난 보통 딸기를 심은 직후에는 브로콜리를 심고, 3년 동안은 감자나 토마토, 가지 같은 건 심지 않아요. 그러한 작물들은 딸기와 똑같은 질병의 숙주거든요.” 이러한 작물의 다양화가 모든 병해충을 없애는 건 아니지만, 농산물에 해를 입히지 않고 관리하기 쉽게 만든다. 또한 토양 매개 질병을 줄여준다고 믿고 있다. 

꼼꼼하게 돌려짓기 계획을 짜는 일 외에도, 자모라 씨는 딸기 두둑 끝에 금잔화를 사이짓기하고 그들 사이에는 라벤더 같은 꽃이 피는여러해살이 식물을 심는다. 

자모라 씨는 “모든 꽃이 익충들에게 이로울 겁니다. 또 어떤 건 내가 시장에 팔 수도 있죠”라고 한다. 멕시코 미초아칸에서 이민을 온 자모라 씨는 유기농업을 추구하는 Agriculture and Land-Based training Association (ALBA) 프로그램에 참여하기 전인 43세에 지역사회 대학에 입학했다. 그는 자신의 성공을 잘 짜인 작부계획과 토양의 건강에 관심을 쏟은 덕이라고 한다. 자모라 씨는 “나처럼 매우 다양화된 농사를 지으려면, 자기 농사에 빠삭해져야 해요. 난 벌써 2018년에는 어디에 딸기를 심을지 계획해 놓았어요”라고 한다.

  

‘먼 유전적 사촌’을 농사를 개선하는 데 활용

자모라 씨는 자신의 돌려짓기를 계획하는 한편, 버클리에서 북쪽으로 두 시간 떨어진 곳의 박사후과정 연구원은 돌려짓기가 해충 통제에 더 나은지를 알아보고자 식물을 다양화하고 작물을 돌려짓기하는 농장의 사례들을 연구한 결과를 분석하고 있다. 최근 켄터키 대학의 조교수로 고용된 데이비드 공티에David Gonthier 씨는 작물의 돌려짓기가 병해충의 순환을 깨뜨릴 뿐만 아니라, 토양의 건강을 개선시키고, 영양 균형을 관리하며 보수력을 향상시키는 효과적인 도구임을 확신한다. 이의 혜택은 생태학자들이 아이오와부터  온타리오에서 행한 최근의 연구가 뒷받침한다. 

생태학의 논문에서는 작물의 다양성이 일반적으로 좋다고 확고하게 언급하지만, 정확하게 돌려짓기하는 작물에 집중하여 농민에게 도움이 되는 연구는 매우 드물다. 이 격차를 해소하기 위하여, 버클리와 산타크루즈의 캘리포니아 대학에 다닌 공티에와 그의 동료들은 참여형 연구와 농장의 지리정보시스템 지도 제작 및 "계통학"이라 부르는 진화 관련성의 측정을 결합시킨 새로운 방법을 개발했다. 

공티에 씨는 진화의 과정에서 공통의 조상으로부터 가지가 뻗어나온 다양한 식물의 과를 지닌 생명의 나무를 상상하라고 설명한다. 이론적으로 더 먼 식물의 사촌은 똑같은 작물 병해충의 숙주가 될 가능성이 적다. 이것이 일부러 해충이 서식하는 걸 방해하도록 작물의 돌려짓기를 설계하는 자모라 씨 같은 농민에게 강력한 도구가 될 수 있는 이유이다. 그런데 이러한 식물이 얼마나 먼 사촌이어야 하는가?

생태학자는 생물학적 해충 통제에 초점을 맞추기에, 공티에 씨는 네이처 지에 실린 캘리포니아 대학 산타크루즈의 생태학자  그렉 길버트Greg Gilbert와 잉그리드 파커Ingrid Parker의 2015년 논문을 읽고는 흥미를 일으켰다. 그들은 초지에 대해 연구했는데, 더 먼 사촌으로 더 많이 집중되어 있는 -또는 계통학적 다양성- 식물 군락이 질병의 수준도 더 낮았다는 걸 밝혔다. 공티에는 길버트와 파커와 연락해서 이 원리가 농장에서도 성립하는지 보기 위해 그들의 방법론을 모방해도 되는지 물었다. 

공티에 씨는 진화의 다양성이 돌려짓기가 더 잘 작동하는지 설명하는 데 도움이 될 수 있는지 살피고자 기존의 작물 돌려짓기에 대한 연구를 분석하며 작업을 시작했다. 그러나 대부분의 연구가 소규모 실험밭에서 실시되었다는 걸 알았고, 공티에 씨는  그 결과가 농장 규모의 생태계에서는 어떠할지 추정하지 못했다. 그래서 그는 자모라 씨를 포함한 농민들과 함께 협력하기 시작했다.  

캘리포니아 북부에 있는 27명의 딸기 농민과 함께 작업을 진행한 콩티에 씨와 연구진은 현재 전체 농장 규모로 "딸기와의 진화적 거리"에 따라 색깔을 달리하는 작물다양성의 지리정보시스템 지도를 개발하고 있다. 그 과정에서 그들은 연구자료를 생성하는 일만이 아니라, 적합한 관리를 위한 시각화 도구를 만드는 일도 농민과 공동으로 하고 있다.

연구에 참여하는 농민들은 공티에 씨와 그 연구진이 수집한 자료에 자신이 관찰하고 목격한 자료를 지도에 표기하고, 여러 작물의 조합이 환경에 어떠한 영향을 미치는지 비교하기 위하여 자기 농장의 진화적 다양성을 그래픽으로 표시할 수 있다. 또한 그 지도는 생태학적, 경제적 적소를 모두 채우는 작물에 관하여 농민과 연구자 들 사이에 활발히 대화하도록 만들었다. 예를 들어, 자모라 씨가 재배하고 있는 다양한 장식용 꽃들은 그의 농사에 생물다양성과 새로운 고부가가치 작물을 모두 더하고 있다. 


다양성을 넘어, 전체 생태계에 적용

공티에 씨는 농민에게 즉각적인 혜택을 주는 것을 넘어, 농장에 더욱 기능적인 생물다양성을 장려하는 일이 식단의 다양성과 식량안보를 향상시킬 수 있다고 믿는다. 그리고 많은 다양한 종류의 작물을 재배하는 것이 대규모 환경 문제를 해결하는 데 기여할 수 있다고 생각한다. 

해충을 저절로 더 잘 통제하도록 농민이 농장의 생태계를 설계하여 농약의 사용을 줄일 수 있다면, 토양과 수질과 농촌 지역사회에 영향을 미치는 독성 물질의 부담을 크게 줄일 수 있을 것이다. 또 향상된 생물다양성이 기후변화에 대한 탄력성을 개선하면서 농민을 도울 수도 있다. 새로운 병해충이 기온의 상승과 강수 패턴의 변화와 함께 나타날 수 있기 때문이다. 또한 공티에 씨는 지리정보시스템 지도가 식물이 어떻게 양분을 사용하는지부터 적절하게 거름을 주고 수분매개자를 유인하는 일까지 자기 농장의 상태 등을 살피려는 농민을 도울 것으로 예상한다. 

공티에 씨는 농민들이 다양한 작부체계를 넘어 대규모 단작을 선택하는 건 보통 농업 부문의 정치경제적 결과물이라고 강조한다. 공티에 씨는 무엇을 돌려짓기하는 것이 이상적인지 알아내기 위해 자모라 씨와 같은 농민들과 함께 작업하면서, 앞으로 나아가 그러한 장애물을 넘기 위하여 사회학자들과 협력할 계획이다. 왜냐하면 —비틀즈에겐 외람되지만— 딸기밭은 영원하지 않을 것이기 때문이다. 


http://civileats.com/2017/04/03/mapping-the-benefits-of-farm-biodiversity/

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  남아시아의 225만 평방킬로미터에 걸쳐 펼쳐져 있는 인도 갠지스 평원은 18억 인구의 쌀과 밀 창고이다. 지난 30년의 시간 동안, 주로 녹색혁명의 개량종과 기술 묶음 덕에 농민들은 여름철 몬순에 벼농사를 짓고 짧은 겨울철에 밀농사를 짓는 돌려짓기 체계를 발전시켰다.

   

  인도 북서부에서, 벼-밀 면적의 확장과 연간 3%의 수확량 증가로 밀 생산이 1970년 2000만 톤에서 1995년 6500만 톤으로 늘어나게 되었다. 그러나 그즈음 쌀과 밀 생산성이 투입재의 사용효율성이 끊임없이 떨어지고, 지하수가 고갈되며, 기온이 오르는 등 '토양의 약화'로 인하여 낮아지기 시작했다.  


  이에 따라, 국가의 농업연구 시스템의 생태-지역 이니셔티브와 국제농업연구 자문단체가 꾸린 벼-밀 콘소시엄은 1995년부터 무경운, 작물의 부산물 돌려주기, 두둑 지어 재배하기, 마른논 파종 등을 포함하는 자원보존형 기술을 장려하고자 공동의 노력을 기울이기 시작했다. 


  밀 생산성의 주요 장애물은 늦은 파종이다. 벼 모내기는 7월에 시작하지만 비가 언제 오느냐에 따라 종종 8월 말까지 이어지기도 한다. 지하수를 퍼올리는 비용이 많이 들고 노동력이 부족함도 그 원인이다. 이렇게 모내기가 늦어지면 벼의 수확도 늦어지고, 이에 따라 밀의 파종도늦어진다. 농민들이 수확이 끝난 논을 싹 갈아엎느라 귀중한 시간을 놓치기도 한다. 


  많은 지역에서 밀은 벼를 수확하고 별다른 경운 작업 없이 파종일에 곧뿌림을 한다. 무경운은 적기에 파종하고 더 잘 자라도록 돕기 때문에 6-10% 정도 밀 수확량을 높이는 데 기여한다. 또한 트랙터 운영비를 절약할 수도 있다. 어떤 지역에서는 관개용수 생산성이 관행농법에 비해 65% 정도 향상되기도 했다. 관개용수 생산성은 무경운과 두둑을 지어 밀을 재배할 때 더욱 향상된다.


  밀 농사에서 무경운을 채택하면 농민은 헥타르당 20%까지 비용을 절감하고 순수익이 28%까지 높아지는 한편, 온실가스 배출을 감소시킨다. 

 

  벼농사의 경우, 콘소시엄은 만생종을 조생종으로 대체하고, 마른논 곧뿌림으로 모내기를 생략하여 관개용수의 사용과 에너지 비용 및 노동력 수요를 줄이도록 장려했다.


  작물이 자라는 동안, 벼의 생산성을 높이고자 다양한 방식이 시도되고 있다. 하나는 논에 물을 가득 담았다가 다시 물을 떼서 말리는 방식이다. 다른 하나는 호기성 벼로서, 마른 흙에 곧뿌림한 다음 물을 댄다. 두 방식을 통해 30-50%의 물을 절약할 수 있다. 


이 평원에 도입된 또 다른 자원보존형 기술은 레이저 수평기이다. 전통적으로 농민들은 나무로 만든 써레 등으로 논의 수평을 잡았다. 현재 민간 계약자가 운영하는 레이저를 활용한 트랙터는 소농이 감당할 수 있는 가격으로 더 정밀하게 수평을 잡아준다. 이 기술은 물의 손실을 40% 이상 줄이고, 비료의 효율성을 높이며, 5-10% 정도 수확량을 향상시킨다. 


또한 농민들은 새로운 돌려짓기를 채택했다. 파키스탄 펀잡 지역의 소농들은 이집션클로버를 쌀과 돌려짓기하여 토양비옥도를 개선하고, 농사에 영향을 줄 수 있는 잡초를 억제한다. 일반적으로 밀을 수확하고 80일 동안 땅을 묵히는 동부의 평원에서는 여름철에 무경운 토양에 녹두를 재배해 헥타르당 1.45톤을 생산한다.


비료를 낭비하는 걸 줄이고자 벼-밀 콘소시엄은 가장 적절한 때 비료를 주도록 작물의 잎 색깔 차트를 도입하여 '수요에 기반한' 질소 관리를 장려했다. 이를 통해 농민들은 수확량의 감소 없이 비료의 사용을 25% 이상 줄일 수 있었다.


2009년 평원 전체에서 수행된 마을 조사는 농가 셋 중 하나는 적어도 하나의 자원보존형 기술을 채택했다는 것을 밝혔다. 인도 북서부에서 무경운 파종기는 트랙터 다음으로 가장 보편화된 농기구였다. 정부의 강력한 지원과 함께 민간 부문에서 개발한 파종기의 유효성 덕에 도입률이 높았던 것이다. 


  절약형 재배 기술의 충격은 최근 인도에서 밀 생산량의 증가에 영향을 주고 있다. 펀잡 지역의 2003-2007년의 흉작을 기록한 뒤, 예를 들어 밀 생산성은 꾸준히 증가하여 2012년에는 헥타르당 평균 5톤을 초과했다.




지금까지 주로 무경운은 벼-밀 작부체계 가운데 밀 농사에 도입되었다. 쌀에 도입하면 관개용수의 사용이 급감할 것으로 예상된다. 무경운, 마른논 곧뿌림의 수많은 시도가 물을 대는 게 굳이 다수확에 필수적인 것이 아님을 밝히고 있다. 


  벼농사를 보존농업으로 단호히 전환하는 일 -특히 볏짚을 논흙에 환원하는- 은 두 곡물의 생산에 긍정적인 효과를 창출할 것이다. 많으 농민들이 볏짚이 덮여 있는 데다 파종기로 밀을 심는 방법을 채택했지만, 여전히 대다수는 심각한 대기오염을 야기시키며 벼를 수확한 뒤 볏짚을 태우고 있다. 


  볏짚 태우기를 줄이고 무경운에 기반한 덮개재배를 권장하고자 펀잡과 하리아나 지방정부는 현재 두터운 볏짚 덮개를 뚫고 밀을 파종할 수 있는 '행복한 파종기(Happy Seeder)'라는 새로운 기술을 확산시키고 있다.  


  자원보존형 기술을 신속히 도입하는 일은 정책적 지원, 기술 지식, 인프라, 시장 접근성 등에 달려 있다. 노동력, 수자원, 에너지의 사용을 집약적이고 지속가능하지 않게 만드는 상품 중심적 기술보다는 체계적 접근이 필요하다. 입증된 기술들을 융합하는 것은 보존농업의 혜택을 완전히 활용하도록 도울 것이다.




출처 Save and Grow in practice: maize, rice, wheat. A guide to sustainable cereal production (FAO, 2016). 



뱀다리... 자료를 찾다가 북한에서 번역해 놓은 보존농업 관련 자료가 있어 첨부한다.


보존농업 -북한판.pdf


또한 한국에서도 벼농사와 관련하여 무경운 농법에 관하여 연구한 자료들이 최근 발간되고 있으니 찾아보면 유용하다.


보존농업 -북한판.pdf
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농장의 작물다양성에 대한 유전자변형 특성의 영향 Effects of Genetically Engineered Traits on Crop Diversity on Farms

농장에서 작물 종의 다양성과 각 작물 품종의 다양성을 유지하는 일은 일반적으로 병해충에 대한 완충지와 해마다 환경의 변화로 인한 어느 한 작물이나 품종의 손실에 대한 안전판을 제공하는 것으로 알려져 있다(Hajjar et al., 2008; Davis et al., 2012; Mijatović et al., 2013). 위원회는 유전자변형 작물의 도입이 작물과 품종의 다양성을 감소시키는 결과를 불러왔다고 우려를 나타내는 의견을 받았다. 또한 유전자변형 작물이 특성화된 작물의 돌려짓기를 구현하는데 큰 방해자가 되었다는 발표자의 이야기도 들었다.

작물 종의 다양성에 대한 유전자변형 특성의 영향Effect of Genetically Engineered Traits on Diversity of Crop Species. 1978~2012년 미국 각지에서 행한 조사에서, Aguilar et al. (2015)는 1987년부터 2012년까지 작물 종의 다양성이 약 20% 감소했다는 것을 밝혔다. 그러한 감소는 특히 중서부에서 두드러졌다. 일반적으로 유전자변형 작물의 사용이 증가한 1996년부터 그러한 경향에 변화가 없었음을 고려하면 유전자변형 작물의 출현 탓에 변화가 일어났다고 하기 어렵다. 또한 농상품의 가격, 종자와 비료 같은 투입재의 비용, 보조금과 사회의 우선순위, 수자원 가용성, 기후 상태 등이 농민이 무엇을 심을지에 대해 영향을 미친다(NRC, 2010b). 미국의 대부분이 입증하듯이, 미국 연방정부와 주 정부의 정책과 관련한 장려책이 크게 영향을 미친다. 농경지의 상태는 농상품의 지급이나 기타 보조금을 유인하기 위하여 연방정부에서 권한을 준 농업법의 지침에 따라 관리되었다(NRC, 2010b). 일부 보조금 프로그램과 정책들 —옥수수와 대두로 만드는 생물연료를 포함하여, 재생가능한 연료의 사용을 목표로 설정된 2007년 에너지 독립과 안보 법안 같은(110 P.L. 140)— 이 작물 다양성을 감소시키는 것과 함께 농상품 작물의 재배면적이 증가하도록 장려했다(Heinemann et al., 2014).

미국의 개별 농장의 차원에서, 유전자변형 옥수수와 대두의 도입 이후 옥수수와 콩, 밀의 이어짓기(하나의 작물을 3 또는 더 이어서 심는) 쪽으로 상당히 변화했다는 증거는 거의 없다(Wallander, 2013; Figure 4-9). 그러나 중서부에서는 미국의 다른 지역과 좀 다른 양상이 나타난다. 4년 연속으로 옥수수의 이이짓기를 하는 경우가 2배(약 3.5%에서 약 7%)로 나타난다(Plourde et al., 2013). 그건 아마 옥수수의 가격을 반영할 것이다.

돌려짓기 없이 이러한 작물들을 매우 광범위하게 잘 재배하는 일은 제초제 저항성 또는 살충제 저항성 유전자변형 작물이 손쉽게 만들 수 있을 것이다. 이러한 작물들의 특성이 경운을 줄이고, 농약 사용을 줄이며, 풀이나 곤충의 조절을 위한 작물 돌려짓기에 대한 의존도를 줄이고, 특정한 돌려짓기 작물에 해를 끼칠 수 있는 긴 잔류 시간과 함께 제초제의 사용을 줄여서 농민들에게 유연성을 제공하기 때문이다. 위원회는 미국 농무부 곤충학자의 연구(Lundgren, 2015)로부터 Bt 옥수수를 채택하여 농민들이 옥수수의 대규모 단작(예를 들어, 옥수수 가격이 높을 때)을 더 쉽게 하도록 만들었다고 들었다. 미국의 농업총조사, 농지 데이터 Layer(CDL), 디지털 항공사진(특히 옥수수 벨트보다 더 작은 농지 지역의)을 활용한 최근의 몇몇 연구들은 유전자변형 품종의 높은 채택율을 나타내는 지역들은 옥수수와 대두만 돌려짓기에 활용하는 모습이 나타난다는 것을 밝히고 있다. Fausti et al. (2012)는 사우스 다코타는 유전자변형 옥수수와 대두의 채택이 다른 어떤 주보다 더 빨랐다는 것을 밝혔다. 유전자변형 옥수수를 심은 지역이 2000년 37%에서 2009년 71%로 증가했다고 한다. 같은 시기, 옥수수와 대두를 심은 농경지의 비율은 약 2배가 되어, 재배면적이 25% 미만에서 약 50%에 이르렀다. 변화의 또 다른 원인으로는 관개의 개발이 증가한 것인데, 옥수수와 대두의 가격이 상승한 것(특히 2007~2009년)이 추동원으로 유전자변형 기술이 작부체계의 변화를 일으켰다는 것을 규명하는 데 어려움을 준다. 

위원회는 초청 농민에게 발표를 들었다(Hill, 2015). 그는 일부 농민들은 비유전자변형 채소와 기타 비유전자변형 작물의 풀을 관리하는 일이 엄청나게 어렵거나 비용이 많이 들기에 풀을 억제하려는 목적으로 유전자변형 품종을 줄지어 심곤 한다고 지적했다. 그러한 농민들에게 유전자변형 작물은 더 다양한 작부체계의 유지를 가능하게 한다.







작물 품종 내에서 유전적 다양성에 대한 유전자변형 특성의 영향Effect of Genetically Engineered Traits on Genetic Diversity Within Crop Species. 세계적으로 재배되는 주요 작물의 종 내에서 유전적 다양성이 지난 세기에 걸쳐 감소했음은 의심의 여지가 없다. Gepts(2006:2281)는 “멕시코에서, 1930년에 기록된 옥수수의 유형 가운데 단 20%만이 지금도 찾아볼 수 있다. 1949년에 중국에서 재배되던 1만 가지의 밀 품종 가운데 단 10%만 여전히 이용한다.”고 지적한다.

많은 품종들이 감소했지만, 최근 44개 저널의 논문을 메타분석하여 옥수수와 대두, 밀을 포함하여 현대의 8가지 작물 품종의 분자 수준(DNA marker) 다양성을 조사한 연구에서는 특정한 작물에서는 부침이 있지만 전체 작물에서는 일반적으로 다양성이 상실된 것이 아님을 밝혔다 (van de Wouw et al., 2010). 초청 발표자는 여러 육종라인의 역교배로 똑같은 하나의 또는 몇 가지 성공적인 유전자변형 특성을 삽입한 품종을 광범위하게 재배하는 것은 유전적 다양성을 감소시키고 어떠한 병원균이나 스트레스에 작물을 취약하게 만들 수 있다고 경고했다 (Goodman, 2014). 예를 들어, 면화에 Bt 독소 Cry1Ac을 단일 삽입하는 일이 전 세계에서 발견되는데, 종종 다섯 또는 더 적은 역교배에 기반을 두고 있다(Dowd-Uribe and Schnurr, 2016). 위원회는 유전자변형 작물이 더 낮은 유전적 다양성과 예측할 수 없는 병원균이나 스트레스 문제를 불러온다는 증거를 발견할 수 없었지만, 녹색 진디(Schizaphis graminum)에 대한 비유전자변형 저항성을 위한 수수(Sorghum bicolor)의 육종에서 재배되는 수수 전반에 유전적 다양성이 감소했다는 증거는 있다(Smith et al., 2010). 그 개발은 작물의 유전적 다양성에 대한 세계적 모니터링의 필요성을 지적한다. van de Wouw et al. (2010)가 검토한 연구들과 작물 품종들에서 유전적 변이에 대한 최근의 연구(예를 들어, Smith et al., 2010; Choudhary et al., 2013)에서 명확해지듯이, 유전적 다양성의 상실에 대한 신중한 모니터링을 위한 도구는 만약 연구자들이 유전적 분석을 수행할 수 있도록 특허를 받은 유전자변형 작물 품종들에 대한 접근이 가능해지면 이용할 수 있다.

결론: Planting of Bt 작물 품종의 재배는 Bt 특성이 없어 합성살충제를 처리하는 비슷한 품종들보다 곤충의 생물다양성이 더 높은 경향이 있다.

결론: 미국에서,글리포세이트 저항성 유전자변형 작물을 재배하는 농민들의 농지는 비유전자변형 작물 품종을 재배하는 곳과 비슷하거나 더 많은 풀의 생물다양성을 갖는다.

결론: 1987년부터, 미국에서 재배하는 작물의 다양성이 감소하고,작물의 돌려짓기 빈도가 감소해 왔다.이는 특히 중서부 지역이 심했다.연구들은 유전자변형 작물과 이러한 경향 사이의 인과관계를 밝힐 수 없었다. 농상품 가격의 변화가 또한 이러한 패턴에 영향을 줄 수 있다.

결론: 20세기에 이용할 수 있는 작물의 품종 수가 감소했지만,몇몇 나라에서 유전자변형 작물의 도입과 광범위한 채택 이후 20세기 말과 21세기 초에 주요 작물 품종들의 유전적 다양성이 감소하지 않았다는 증거가 있다.




National Academy of Sciences[Genetically Engineered Crops: Experiences and Prospects], 92~94쪽, National Academy press, 2016.

 


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유전자변형 작물, 일명 GMO가 도입되어 상업적으로 재배된 지 어느덧 17년 정도가 되었다. 처음 이 작물이 도입될 때 지지자들은 농약 사용량이 줄고, 그에 따라 환경이 좋아지며 농민들도 소득이 증가할 것이라고 찬양 일색이었다. 


그런데 자연은 그렇게 만만치 않았다. 유전자변형 작물의 핵심은 제초제를 맞아도 죽지 않거나 스스로 독성 물질을 만들어내 해충을 방어하는 데에 있다. 그를 통해 농작업을 획기적으로 편하게 만든 것이다. 그런데 그에 대한 내성을 지닌 풀과 벌레, 일명 슈퍼 잡초와 슈퍼 해충이 나타나고 있는 것이다. 사람으로 치면, 항생제를 너무 열심히 사용하다가 항생제 내성균이 등장한 것과 같다고나 할까. 


이에 대한 해결책으로 다양한 방법이 제시될 수 있겠다. 그런데 한 가지 분명한 것은 생명공학산업에서는 또 다른 유전자변형 작물로 이번 문제를 해결하려고 할 것이라는 점이다. 이에 대해 반대하는 쪽에서는 잘못된 농업관행을 바꾸고 유전자변형 작물을 포기하는 방향을 제시하고 있다. 물론 나도 그에 찬성하는데, 쉽지 않은 사실이 하나 있다. 바로 극소수의 농민이 대다수의 사람들을 먹여살려야 한다는 점이다. 현실적으로 바로 그 점 때문에 유전자변형 작물이라는 요상한 생명체가 이 세상에 탄생하여 명맥을 이어가고 있는 것이 아닌가. 결국은 단순히 유전자변형 작물에 대한 찬반을 넘어, 우리가 살고 있는 사회를 어떻게 바꾸어야 하며 그를 위해 나는 무엇을 해야 하는가 하는 문제까지 고민해야 한다고 생각한다.

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미국에서 재배하는 옥수수, 콩, 목화로 대표되는 생명공학 작물들이 마침내 적수를 만났다. 그건 유전자변형 작물 또는 GMO를 함유한 식품에 대한 표시제를 요구하는 수백만 소비자들이 아니다. NPR의 보고서에 따르면, 생명공학의 최고 천적은 생명공학 작물의 대부분이 필요로 하는 제초제와 살충제에 내성이 생긴 풀과 벌레의 군단이다. 

일반적으로 GMO 작물은 두 가지 범주에 들어간다. 하나는 몬산토의 다목적 제초제인 라운드업 같은 농약에 저항성을 갖도록 설계된 것이다. 이는 농민들이 라운드업을 살포하면 재배하려고 하는 옥수수, 콩 또는 목화만 남기고 모든 것을 죽인다. 또 다른 GMO 작물은 실제로 많은 해충을 죽이는 “자연의” 농약인 Bt 같은 화학물질을 내는 것이다. 

이 기술이 세계식량상을 받을만 한지 아닌지 모르겠지만, 확실히 사업에서는 대성공을 거두었다. 적어도  작물에 해를 입히는 풀과 벌레가 죽지 않고 견디며 나타나기 전까지 말이다.

우리는 몇 년 동안 슈퍼 잡초슈퍼 해충의 재앙을 추적하고 있었다. 생명공학의 장단점에 대한 어떠한 논쟁이 있든지간에, 현장에서 드러나는 사실은 한때의 패배자가 이제는 승리하고 있다는 것이다. 

이제는 더 이상 슈퍼 잡초와 슈퍼 해충이 부상하고 있다는 류의 이야기가 아니다. 현재 그들은 우위에 있다. 아래의 최근 발표된 Food and Water Watch의 보고서에 나오는 그림을 보면 GMO 작물이 도입되고 몇 년 지나지 않은 2000년에는 슈퍼 잡초가 거의 드물었다. 그러나 현재는 완전히 다르다. 



슈퍼 해충, 특히 넓적다리잎벌레 같은 벌레가 유전자변형 옥수수, 콩, 목화가 내는 Bt 물질에 점점 내성을 가지고 있다. 과학자들은 아직도 문제의 범위와 내성이 GMO 작물 때문인지 또는 문제가 되고 있는 해충의 돌연변이 때문인지 탐사하고 있다. 원인이 무엇이든지간에, 농민들은 생계에 대한 위협이 증가하고 있어 이걸 어떻게 처리하면 좋을지 알아내야 하는 사람들이다. 

농업 무역 출판물 Brownfield와의 인터뷰에서 농경제학자 Todd Claussen 씨는 적어오 아이오와 주에서는 확실히 내성이 생긴 넓적다리잎벌레 때문에 GMO Bt 옥수수에 피해가 생기고 있다고 인정했다. 그게 다가 아니다. Claussen 씨는 올해 아이오와 주에서 넓적다리잎벌레가 여느 해보다 40~50배 상황을 악화시킬 수 있다고 설명한다. 그리고 가뭄과 그에 이어 때이른 폭우라는 최근의 기후 조건이 그 벌레들이 성장하는 데 완벽한 상황을 만들었다고 한다. 

자연은 생명공학이 전혀 기대하지 않은 탄력성과 변화하는 환경에 적응하는 능력을 보여주고 있다. Food and Water Watch가 새로운 보고서에서 그 주제에 대해 지적한 것처럼, 단기적 결과는 농약 관련 기업에게 엄청난 혜택으로 돌아갔다. 이들 대부분은 GMO 종자 시장을 꽉 잡고 있기도 하다. 아무튼 농민들이 이러한 풀과 벌레라는 환상의 짝궁을 통제하기 위해 더욱더 많은 독성 농약에 의존했기 때문이다. 

예를 들어, 농민들은 현재 옥수수와 콩, 목화에 15년 전보다 10배나 많은 라운드업 제초제를 살포하고 있다. 그건 라운드업 레디 작물이 널리 재배된 탓도 있긴 하지만, 슈퍼 잡초를 해결하기 위해 농민들이 면적당 사용하는 라운드업의 양을 늘리고 있기 때문이기도 하다. 

농약 사용이 증가했다는 더 좋은 지표는 고엽제의 성분이기도 한 고독성 농약 2,4-D이다.  많은 농민들이 그 자체의 독성만이 아니라 이웃 농지로 이동하는 경향 때문에 포기했던 것인데, 농민들은 풀의 승리와 함께 선택의 여지가 없다는 걸 알고는 슬슬 2,4-D를 사용하고 있다. Food and Water Watch의 보고서에 나오는 아래의 도표에 나타나듯이, 2,4-D의 사용은 현재 라운드업 레디 GMO 종자가 널리 채택되기 전의 수준으로 돌아갔다. 


이 화학물질은 최근 다우 농과학이 2,4-D에 저항성이 있는 GMO 종자와 함께 미국 농무부에 승인을 신청해 이중으로 논란이 되고 있다. 따라서 모든 것이 다시 순환될 수 있다. 풀이 우리의 라운드업 레디 작물보다 한 수 더 뜨고 있는가? 우린 단지 고엽제 레디 작물로 대신하면 되는가. 그것은 역시 풀이 그에 대한 대비책을 찾기 전까지다. 

미국 농무부는 소비자의 안전에 대한 옹호자와 수질과 농약의 이동에 관해 우려하는 농민들의 강력한 반대에 직면하여 2,4-D 종자에 대한 승인을 지연하고 있다. 그러나 디캄바와 이소자플루톨 같은 고독성 농약에 저항성이 있는 또 다른 몇 가지 GMO 종자와 함께 다우의 제품이 규제당국의 승인을 얻는 건 시간 문제일 뿐이다.

이 모든 종자가 시장에 나온다면, 미국 농지의 농약 사용량은 급증할 것이다. 그리고 물이 오염되고, 인체에 노출되며, 농산물의 화학물질 잔류량도 증가할 것이다.

그러나 화학을 통한 더 나은 대안이 존재한다. 농민들은 단지 옥수수 이어짓기를 멈추고 귀리와 자주개자리를 돌려짓기하면 된다. NPR에서 이야기했듯이, 가장 간단하고 값싸며 안전한 해결책은 잠시만 다른 작물로 전환하는 것이다. 돌려짓기, 즉 같은 농지에 다른 작물을 번갈아 가며 재배하는 방법은 해충을 막는 오래된 기술이다. 어떠한 작물을 먹는 벌레가 다른 작물까지 먹는 건 흔하지 않다. 옥수수의 넓적다리잎벌레는 귀리를 심은 농지에서는 굶주릴 것이다. 그래서 작물을 전환하는 것은 농민들이 한 발 앞서 피하는 길이 될 것이다.

그러나 돌려짓기는 더 어려운 문제이다. GMO 종자 더하기 값싼 합성 화학비료 더하기 높은 시장 가격은 언제나 더 간단히 농상품을 만들 수 있기에 똑같은 농지에다 “옥수수를 이어짓기”하도록 문을 활짝 열어놓았다.

그러나 작물 돌려짓기에 대한 최근의 연구에서는 고가의 GMO 종자와 화학물질, 심지어 화학비료에 돈을 덜 지출하기 때문에 돌려짓기로 인해 농민이 반드시 손해를 보지는 않는다고 지적했다. 미국 농무부조차 그렇게 이야기한다. 농무부에서는 해충 관리와 기후 탄력성을 개선하기 위해 “다양한 작부체계(multi-cropping)”라는 방법을 채용하도록 홍보하기 시작했다. 문제는 이 기관에서 제초제 저항성 종자를 내려는 생명공학 기업들도 장려하고 있다는 점이다. 

그러나 자연은 지금까지 몇 번이나 화학자보다 한 수 위의 능력을 보여주었다. 아마 우리가 질 것 같은 또 다른 싸움을 시작하려고 뛰어드는 것보다 자연과 함께 일을 시작하는 편이 현명할 것이다. 



http://grist.org/food/turf-war-in-the-battle-for-our-crops-superweeds-are-winning/

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Introduction

Weed prevention begins at the planning stage of any cropping system. Plan the crop rotation and cropping system to keep the soil fully occupied by desired living vegetation, or at least covered by organic residues, as much of the year as possible.

An idle soil is the weed devil’s playground! For example, growing continuous corn each summer with winter fallow leaves the entire field available for weeds from harvest in early fall until crop emergence late the following spring. Between-row spaces remain open for weed growth until crop canopy closure—which may take two months or more for corn. This is why continuous corn is economically feasible only for conventional producers who use synthetic herbicides—and many of them now strive to save soil, money, and chemicals by planting a winter rye cover crop after corn harvest.

Any plant or other organism requires a suitable habitat or niche in order to grow and reproduce. A niche is a site within which certain conditions exist, allowing the organism to thrive and complete its life cycle. For most weeds of vegetables and other annual cropping systems, any space or time in which the soil has been recently disturbed or is open and uncovered by other vegetation constitutes a suitable niche. Thus, a key step in ecological weed management is to reduce the number and size of these weed niches in the cropping system.

Most organic vegetable farms grow a diversity of crops throughout the season, and the nonuse of herbicides opens options for crop rotation, multicropping, and cover cropping to limit niches for weeds. However, open niches typically occur during early stages of crop growth (Fig. 1). Those vegetable crops that do not form a solid canopy or root mass pose the greatest challenge, in that they do not fully occupy the niche and are thus most likely to become weedy.

Weeds emerging in wide interrow space of young squash planting
Figure 1. Morning glories and other weeds are just beginning to emerge in the wide expanses of bare soil between these rows of young winter squash. Figure credit: Mark Schonbeck, Virginia Association for Biological Farming.

A few basic tips for minimizing weed niches include:

  • Design tight crop rotations, including production and cover crops that keep fields covered by vegetation as much as possible throughout the calendar year. In regions with cold winters, provide winter cover in the form of dormant hardy cover crops, winter-killed high-biomass covers, or other mulch or crop residues.
  • For each field, bed, or section, schedule crop planting to take place promptly after harvesting or terminating the previous crop.
  • Schedule a cover crop whenever a field or bed is expected to come out of production for longer than 30 days during the growing season, or for the remainder of the fall and winter (Fig. 2).
  • Choose planting patterns—row spacing and within-row spacing—that promote early canopy closure (foliage covers the ground so you can’t see soil surface when viewed from above), without compromising crop yield by crowding.
  • When practical, plan to mulch bare soil between crop rows or beds (open niches in space). While mulch does not close off the weed niche as thoroughly as a closed canopy of living crops, it hinders most annual weeds, and conserves moisture and nutrients for the crop.

Prompt planting of winter rye-vetch cover suppresses chickweed
Figure 2. In the left side of this field, a cover crop of winter ryehairy vetch was planted promptly after harvest of summer vegetables. Photographed at the beginning of December on a farm on Cape Cod, MA, a thick mat of cover crop has largely closed the niche for winter weeds. on the right, a delay in cover cropping has allowed a mat of common chickweed to grow. Figure credit: Mark Schonbeck, Virginia Association for Biological Farming.

Schedule bare soil periods for limited times only, and only with specific purposes. These could include a period of cultivated fallow to draw down weed seed banks, to weaken invasive perennial weeds, or to germinate and remove weeds in a stale seedbed and allow soil warming before planting a vegetable. Another strategic fallow technique is to mow promptly after vegetable harvest to stop weed seed formation, then delay tillage for a few weeks to give the farm's cleanup crew of ground beetles, crickets, field mice, and other weed seed predators a chance to consume a substantial percentage of any weed seeds formed and shed prior to harvest. In each of these examples, the weed niche has been deliberately opened in a way that facilitates the reduction of weed populations.

Advanced and Experimental Techniques for Closing Off Weed Niches

Innovative growers and researchers continue to explore and develop new ways to reduce niches for weeds. Whereas these methods have not performed consistently enough to be recommended for widespread application, they can give excellent results when used skillfully in certain circumstances. Some of these techniques include:

  • Intercropping or companion planting
  • Interseeding or overseeding cover crops into established vegetable crops
  • No-till cover crop management prior to vegetable planting
  • Living mulches—low-growing ground covers between crop rows or beds
  • Self-seeding winter annual cover crops

Intercropping

Intercropping is the practice of growing two or more cash crops within a single bed or in alternating rows across the field, to optimize crop use of resources and to minimize space and other resources available to weeds. Vegetable crops grown together should differ in maturity date, plant architecture, rooting depth and structure, and nutrient demands in ways that reduce competition among the crops and increase total competition against weeds. Crop combinations should be chosen that have neutral or positive biochemical interactions with one another—that is, no adverse allelopathic effects—and complementary needs for light, moisture, and nutrients. This practice of companion planting is widely used in ancient traditional food gardening systems, as well as some intensively managed market gardens today.

Examples include: lettuce between rows of tomatoes, in which the lettuce shades out early-emerging weeds, and is harvested before it competes with the tomatoes (Fig. 3); spinach between Brussels sprouts (similar relationship); or quick-growing greens (heavy feeders for N, tolerant of partial shade) between widely spaced trellised rows of tall snow or snap peas, which fix their own N. The Native American “three sisters” system combines corn, runner beans, and squash, whose complementary architecture utilizes space and resources effectively, and usually yields more food per unit area than any one of the crops grown alone. The corn provides support for the beans, the beans fix nitrogen, and the squash vines rapidly cover ground between corn hills or rows and suppress weeds.

Interplanting of tomatoes and greens in hoophouse
Figure 3. Charlie Maloney of Dayspring Farm in Cologne, VA (Tidewater region) intercrops lettuce and bok choy with his high-tunnel tomatoes, thus producing two crops while virtually eliminating niches for weeds in his production beds. The greens are ready to harvest just as the tomatoes enter their rapid growth phase and begin to occupy the whole bed. Figure credit: Mark Schonbeck, Virginia Association for Biological Farming.

Another form of intercropping alternates widely spaced rows of large vegetables like tomatoes or winter squash with swaths of cover crop such as buckwheat. The latter is allowed to grow and suppress weeds for several weeks, then cut before it begins to compete with the vegetables, and left on the soil surface as a mulch that retards later-emerging weeds.

Interseeding or Overseeding

Interseeding or overseeding of cover crops into a standing cash crop can eliminate the empty niche following harvest. Red, white, crimson, and subterranean clovers; Italian ryegrass; winter rye; and oats have sufficient shade- and traffic-tolerance to become established under the cash crop, then grow rapidly after it is harvested and cleared. Red clover is especially shade-tolerant with a “light compensation point” near 6% of full sun, so that its seedlings can become established even under a winter squash or pumpkin canopy. Combining a clover with a grass may fill the postharvest niche more thoroughly than either alone.

Some vegetable growers, especially those living in colder climates with short growing seasons, broadcast cover crops into established vegetables just before a final shallow cultivation to remove existing weeds and incorporate the cover crop seed. Essentially, this strategy utilizes the time after the vegetable crop’s minimum weed-free period to begin growing a cover crop in lieu of late-emerging weeds. Success depends on sufficient moisture and seed–soil contact to get the cover crop established.

Veteran vegetable grower and author Eliot Coleman has refined this approach, using a multirow push-seeder to drill cover crops between vegetable rows immediately after the final cultivation. Drilling can give better seed–soil contact, uniformity and stand establishment than broadcasting. Coleman (1995) developed an eight-year rotation for central Vermont (hardiness zone 4) that includes eight different vegetables, seven of them overseeded with various clovers and other cover crops (Fig. 4).

Elliott Coleman's cover cropping system
Figure 4. Eliot Coleman, author of The New Organic Grower, uses a five-row push seeder to plant cover crops between rows of vegetables when the latter are at midgrowth. After vegetables are harvested and cleared away, the young clover cover crop rapidly covers the ground, effectively closing the niche between the vegetable and subsequent cover crop, while fixing nitrogen. Figure credits: Mark Schonbeck, Virginia Association for Biological Farming.

Grubinger (2004) has documented other successful cover crop overseeding practices used by organic farmers. Hank Bissell of Lewis Creek Farm in Starksboro, VT interseeds rye manually into fall brassicas to obtain winter and spring cover after the vegetables are finished. In early July, Will Stevens of Golden Russet Farm in Shoreham, VT seeds hairy vetch into winter squash. The vetch becomes established under the squash, covers the ground when frost kills squash foliage, and grows until the following May, thereby shutting out weeds while fixing a lot of nitrogen.

Watch this video to see how Hank Bissell of Lewis Creek Farm in Starksboro, VT manually interseeds winter rye in late fall into brassicas to obtain winter and spring cover after the vegetables are finished.

 

Watch this video to see how Will Stevens of Golden Russet Farm in Shoreham, VT uses summer-seeded hairy vetch in winter squash.

No-till Cover Crop Management

No-till cover crop management entails mowing or rolling a mature cover crop to create an in situmulch, into which vegetable starts or large seeds can be planted. This eliminates the bare-soil period between a cover crop and the subsequent vegetable, as well as tillage-related stimuli to weed seed germination. Under favorable conditions, the mulch from a high-biomass cover crop can delay the onset of weed growth for four or more weeks after vegetable planting. However, results in terms of weed control and vegetable yield have been inconsistent. Additional research is needed to refine this technique and define circumstances in which it is most likely to succeed.

Living Mulch

Living mulch consists of one or more low-growing ground cover species—for example, low-growing legumes such as white Dutch clover; dwarf perennial ryegrass; and creeping red fescue—maintained between crop rows or beds by periodic mowing. The goal is to replace tall, competitive, hard-to-manage weeds with low-growing perennial vegetation that suppresses weeds and protects the soil, while having minimal impact on crop yield. This approach works well for woody perennial crops like blueberries, grapes, and orchard fruits. However, it has been found difficult to keep living mulches from reducing vegetable yields by competing for moisture or nutrients. Living mulch has been used successfully in alleys between plastic-mulched beds of either annual vegetables or perennial crops.

Watch this video to see how Lou Lego, Elderberry Pond Couthry Foods, Auburn, NY uses living mulches between plastic-mulched vegetable rows.

The living mulch and some of its variants remain subjects of experimentation by scientists and farmers. A dying mulch consists of a winter annual grain, such as rye, planted in early spring to suppress or supplant between-row or between-bed weeds in spring planted vegetables. As summer heat builds, the winter annual living mulch declines and dies back while the vegetables enter their rapid growth and maturation phases. Another form of dying mulch is a non-winter-hardy cover crop, such as oats or buckwheat, sown in mid to late summer ahead of fall garlic planting. When the cover crop frost-kills, it becomes mulch through which the garlic emerges at the end of winter. In Pennsylvania, organic vegetable farmers Anne and Eric Nordell plant garlic into standing oats + field peas in October, which later winter-kill to provide at least some of the mulch required to suppress spring weeds in the garlic.

Self-seeding Winter Annual Cover Crops

Certain varieties of winter annual cover crops like subterranean clover, crimson clover, bigflower vetch, and Italian ryegrass can be grown as self-seeding cover crops. The cover crop is allowed to set seed and die down naturally in late spring, then followed by warm-season vegetable crops. The seeds germinate in late summer under the vegetable, thus regenerating the cover crop for the following winter without the need for postharvest tillage and seedbed preparation. The cover crop seed must be sufficiently summer-dormant that it does not emerge too early and compete with the vegetable, yet must establish sufficient stands to outcompete fall weeds. Farmers Jean Mills and Carol Eichelberger use crimson clover and annual ryegrass as self-seeding cover crops for certain vegetables on their farm in Coker, Alabama (Fig. 5).

Volunteer crimson clover and italian ryegrass
Figure 5. The crimson clover and Italian ryegrass growing beneath these fall broccoli emerged from seed shed by an earlier cover crop the preceding spring. Hot summer weather kept the seeds dormant until the onset of autumn, at which time the vegetable was sufficiently established so that the emerging ryegrss and clover did not compete significantly. The photo was taken November, 2005 at Jean Mills and Carol Eichelberger's Tuscaloosa CSA in Coker, AL. Figure credit: Mark Schonbeck, Virginia Association for Biological Farming.

Minimizing Weed Niches in Small and Larger Scale Vegetable Production

Farmers and gardeners have developed many site-specific strategies for closing off weed niches in annual vegetable cropping systems. The details depend on climate, soil conditions, weed flora, crops grown, available equipment, and scale of operation. Growers who have limited land area tend to use more labor-intensive approaches aimed at maximum year round production of desired crop plants, and can afford to do some hand weeding during crop production. Farmers working larger acreages seek labor-efficient means to reduce weed pressure prior to planting the vegetable crop, thus minimizing weed control labor during crop production.

Over the past 40 years, Alan Chadwick and John Jeavons pioneered and developed the BioIntensive Minifarming method for sustainable food production in communities with limited land, machinery, and financial resources. Biointensive minifarming aims to make maximal use of every square foot of land to produce either food or biomass (grass–legume cover crops) to use for mulch or making compost. This system is characterized by very tight crop rotations with 60% of the time in cover crops, close plant spacings, companion planting, and multiple cropping (Jeavons, 2006). While labor intensive, this approach is highly productive and leaves little space for weeds to invade or compete. The few weeds that do emerge are pulled manually before they set seed, and composted.

Eric and Anne Nordell, who manage a six-acre vegetable farm in Pennsylvania primarily with draft horses, have developed an approach to weed management that they call bioextensive. Their strategy is to "weed the soil, not the crop", and their crop rotations include only one market crop every two years (Nordell and Nordell, 2006). The rest of the rotation is devoted to two high-biomass, weed-excluding cover crops, separated by a brief (4–6 week) cultivated fallow during the nonproduction season to draw down weed seed populations. Timing of fallow, cultivation implements (all horse-drawn), and methods are adjusted according to the existing weed flora—very shallow for small-seeded annuals; deeper for quack grass, dandelion, and other perennials. In the production year, the final cover crop is shallow-incorporated (minimizing tillage depth to reduce weed seed germination) a few weeks before vegetable planting. The Nordells find that this system greatly reduces weed control labor during vegetable production.

Watch this video about how the Nordells use ridge tillage and cover crops to greatly reduce weed control labor during vegetable production.

Another approach used on farms with sufficient land is to follow several years of intensive annual cropping with one to three full years under a perennial sod cover crop, such as red clover–timothy–orchardgrass. The perennial covers are planted, sometimes with a nurse crop of oats or other cereal grain, either after a vegetable harvest, or as an overseed into a standing vegetable crop. In addition to rebuilding the soil, the perennial cover effectively closes the niche for annual weeds-of-cultivation like lambsquarters and pigweeds, so that they cannot reproduce, and their weed seed bank declines through seed predation and decay. View the followng video clips for some ingenious and effective uses of perennial cover crops to build fertility and reduce weeds in organic vegetable production:

Watch this video to see how Will Stevens of Golden Russet Farm in Shoreham, VT uses frost-seeded red clover.

References and Citations

  • Coleman, E. 1995. The new organic grower: A master's manual of tools and techniques for the home and market gardener. 2nd ed. Chelsea Green Publishing, White River Junction, VT.
  • Grubinger, V. 2004. Farmers and their innovative cover cropping techniques [VHS tape/DVD]. University of Vermont Extension, Burlington, VT.
  • Jeavons, J. 2006. How to grow more vegetables and fruits, nuts, berries, grains and other crops than you ever thought possible on less land than you can imagine. 7th edition. Ten Speed Press, Berkley, CA.
  • Nordell, E., and A. Nordell. 2006. Weed the soil, not the crop: A whole-farm approach to the weed-free market garden. Small Farmer's Journal 30 (3 - summer): 53–58.
  • Schonbeck, M., and R. Morse. 2007. Reduced tillage and cover cropping systems for organic vegetable production. Virginia Association for Biological Farming information sheet No. 9-07. (Available online at: http://www.vabf.org/docman/information-sheets/reduced-tillage-and-cover-cropping-systems-for-organic-vegetable-production/view) (verified 23 March 2010).


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http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art40/



요약


We hypothesize that biological diversification across ecological, spatial, and temporal scales maintains and regenerates the ecosystem services that provide critical inputs—such as maintenance of soil quality, nitrogen fixation, pollination, and pest control—to agriculture. Agrobiodiversity is sustained by diversified farming practices and it also supplies multiple ecosystem services to agriculture, thus reducing environmental externalities and the need for off-farm inputs. We reviewed the literature that compares biologically diversified farming systems with conventional farming systems, and we examined 12 ecosystem services: biodiversity; soil quality; nutrient management; water-holding capacity; control of weeds, diseases, and pests; pollination services; carbon sequestration; energy efficiency and reduction of warming potential; resistance and resilience to climate change; and crop productivity. We found that compared with conventional farming systems, diversified farming systems support substantially greater biodiversity, soil quality, carbon sequestration, and water-holding capacity in surface soils, energy-use efficiency, and resistance and resilience to climate change. Relative to conventional monocultures, diversified farming systems also enhance control of weeds, diseases, and arthropod pests and they increase pollination services; however, available evidence suggests that these practices may often be insufficient to control pests and diseases or provide sufficient pollination. Significantly less public funding has been applied to agroecological research and the improvement of diversified farming systems than to conventional systems. Despite this lack of support, diversified farming systems have only somewhat reduced mean crop productivity relative to conventional farming systems, but they produce far fewer environmental and social harms. We recommend that more research and crop breeding be conducted to improve diversified farming systems and reduce yield gaps when they occur. Because single diversified farming system practices, such as crop rotation, influence multiple ecosystem services, such research should be holistic and integrated across many components of the farming system. Detailed agroecological research especially is needed to develop crop- and region-specific approaches to control of weeds, diseases, and pests.




INTRODUCTION

While modern, industrialized agricultural systems in theory produce sufficient food to feed the world’s current population, they have accomplished this feat with significant ecological and social externalities (Hazell and Wood 2008). Food needs are projected to double by 2050. It is a global imperative to meet this growing demand for food in a manner that is socially equitable and ecologically sustainable over the long term. Here we examine the ecological benefits of using biologically diversified farming systems, as well as their potential to mitigate environmental externalities of conventional farming systems and their ability to contribute to global food security as world population rises to 9 billion. 

We define a diversified farming system as a system of agricultural production that, through a range of practices, incorporates agrobiodiversity across multiple spatial and/or temporal scales (Altieri 2004, Pearson 2007, Jackson et al. 2009, Tomich et al. 2011, Kremen et al. 2012).

Diversified farming systems share much in common with organic, multifunctional, sustainable, and agroecological management approaches and outcomes. The key indicators of a diversified farming system is that diversification across ecological, spatial, and temporal scales serves as the mechanism for maintaining and regenerating the biotic interactions and, in turn, the ecosystem services—e.g., soil quality, nitrogen fixation, pollination, and pest control— that provide critical inputs to agriculture (see also Shennan 2008). Across ecological scales, a diversified farming system includes several or all of: (1) genetic diversity within crop or livestock varieties; (2) varietal diversity within a single crop or livestock species; (3) multiple intercropped species, and/or integration of fish or livestock species; and (4) noncrop plantings and seminatural communities of plants and animals, such as insectary strips, hedgerows, riparian buffers, pastures, and woodlots. Across spatial scales, diversified farming systems promote agrobiodiversity through practices located within field (e.g., composting, intercropping, insectary strips, agroforestry), across the whole field (e.g., crop rotations, cover cropping, fallowing), around field perimeters (e.g., hedgerows, border plantings, grass strips), across multiple fields (mosaics of crop types and land-use practices), and at the landscape-to-regional scale (e.g., riparian buffers, woodlots, pastures, and natural or seminatural areas). Across temporal scales, asynchronous tilling, planting, harvesting, cover cropping, crop rotations, fallowing, or flooding contribute to the maintenance of landscape-scale heterogeneity (Shennan 2008), while no-till, perennial grass, forb or tree cropping systems, hedgerow set-asides, and forest gardens allow the natural processes of ecological succession to enhance agrobiodiversity dynamically (Altieri 2004, Glover et al. 2007, Bhagwat et al. 2008). 

Agrobiodiversity is sustained by diversified farming system practices and it also supplies multiple ecosystem services to agriculture, thereby reducing the need for off-farm inputs. For example, through composting and manuring, soils are produced that harbor diverse microbial and invertebrate communities which in turn promote nutrient cycling (Mäder et al. 2002, Reganold et al. 2010). Through intercropping of nitrogen-fixing legumes with grains, farmers achieve the well-known phenomenon of “over-yielding”—i.e., the production of a larger amount of each crop per unit area relative to production in monoculture—thereby increasing yields while reducing or eliminating fertilizer inputs (Vandermeer 1992). Intercropping is thought to promote over-yielding because different crops grown together can utilize more of the available resources (e.g., crops with different rooting depths can access a larger fraction of spatially stratified nutrients and water) or because one crop facilitates the growth of the other (Hauggard-Neilsen and Jensen 2005). By enhancing floral diversity on farms through insectary strips, hedgerows, or retention of seminatural areas, farmers may enhance or attract natural enemies and/or wild pollinators to their crops and thereby increase pest control or reduce or eliminate the need for honey bee rentals (Kremen et al. 2002, Morandin and Winston 2005, Letourneau et al. 2011). The supply of these ecosystem services (e.g., soil fertility, pest control, pollination) is critically dependent on the maintenance of the underlying biodiversity—from soil microbes to flora and fauna—and on their interactions (Altieri and Nicolls 2004, Hooper et al. 2005, Zhang et al. 2007, Hajjar et al. 2008, Shennan 2008, Jackson et al. 2009). Maintaining diversity across scales through diversified farming system practices not only enhances these ecosystem services (Table 1) but promotes their resilience in the face of disturbances such as drought, deluge, or pest infestations (Tengo and Belfrage 2004, Lin 2011).

Increasingly in the Global South and largely in the north, diversified farming systems have been replaced with highly simplified industrial monocultures (Benton et al. 2003, Tscharntke et al. 2005, DeFries et al. 2010). Average field and farm sizes have increased, while noncrop areas in and around farms have decreased, leading to higher levels of homogeneity at both the field and landscape scales. The collective simplification of agroecosystems has led to a loss of biodiversity and to reductions in the supply of key ecosystem services to and from agriculture (Tscharntke et al. 2005, Zhang et al. 2007). Without these ecosystem services, monocultures become dependent on off-farm inputs. For example, without the integration of farming practices that fix nitrogen, make efficient use of nutrients, and build soil fertility (see Table 1), growers must purchase and apply synthetic fertilizers. Similarly, without practices that prevent the build-up of pests and pathogens and promote diverse communities of natural enemies, growers must purchase and apply pesticides. While effective in producing high yields, conventional chemical inputs that substitute for ecosystem services contribute to significant environmental and social harms, including soil degradation, eutrophication of surface and groundwater, loss of biodiversity, increased greenhouse gas emissions, marine dead zones, and occupational and dietary exposure to toxic agrochemicals (Tilman et al. 2002, Diaz and Rosenberg 2008, Hayes et al. 2010, Marks et al. 2010, Gomiero et al. 2011a). Industrialized agriculture is also partially responsible for creating a range of social and economic impacts, including loss of access to land, corporate control of agricultural inputs, and the inability of small-scale producers to compete on the global market, resulting in high rates of poverty and the loss of food security for small holders (Bacon et al. 2012, Iles and Marsh 2012). 

We assessed the ecological performance of biologically diversified farming systems as compared with conventional (industrialized) systems across 12 key ecosystem services that represent inputs to farming (e.g., soil fertility), mitigation of externalities associated with farming (e.g., energy-use efficiency), adaptation of farming to environmental change (e.g., resistance and resilience to extreme weather events), and outputs from farming (crop productivity) (Table 2). We begin by discussing biodiversity, because it underlies all other services (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2005), and then we discuss the related services of soil quality maintenance, nutrient management, and water-holding capacity. Next we cover control of weeds, plant pathogens, and arthropod pests. We continue with pollination services, and then with climate-related services, including carbon sequestration, energy-use efficiency/reduction of global-warming potential, and the resistance and resilience of farming systems to extreme weather events. Finally, we consider crop productivity, including discussion of the potential trade-off of lowered yields against biodiversity and habitat conservation.

METHODS

For each service, we identified representative scientific literature in a Web of Science search using the terms specified in Table 2. We looked for papers that compared biologically based, diversified farming systems (including organic) with chemically based, biologically simplified conventional farming systems (i.e., those reliant on monoculture, inorganic fertilizers, and synthetic chemical pest-control inputs). We reviewed these papers and prioritized the following types of studies (in descending order) for inclusion in our review: (1) meta-analyses or quantitative syntheses; (2) studies of long-term systems (7+ years) or highly replicated, multiregion studies; and (3) review articles including “vote counts”. We prioritized meta-analyses and quantitative syntheses because such studies use statistical methods for combining research results and extracting overall trends from multiple studies that on their own may present conflicting results (Rosenthal and Matteo 2001). Next, we included long-term or highly replicated multiregion studies, because such studies draw inferences that incorporate temporal or spatial variance, and are thus more likely to represent robust conclusions. Finally, when no meta-analyses or quantitative syntheses were available, we utilized reviews with “vote-counts”—while such reviews do not have the ability to resolve conflicts among study results, they provide a qualitative summary of multiple studies, and an assessment of the number of studies in that topic area. In some cases, we identified additional papers from the reference lists of the included papers.

While not all organic agriculture meets the definition of a diversified farming system (Kremen et al. 2012), organic systems frequently use many of the techniques utilized in diversified farming systems (especially compost, cover crops, crop rotation, and absence of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers). There is a relatively large body of literature comparing organic with conventional agriculture, whereas this is not always the case for diversified farming systems. We therefore frequently used organic as a proxy for diversified farming systems, but recognize the limitations this may impose. We also included comparisons across gradients of land-use intensification, when appropriate.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Biodiversity

Multiple meta-analyses have shown that organic farming increases species abundance and richness locally, but its effects differ between taxonomic groups, and with landscape context and intensiveness of production systems (Table 3, Bengtsson et al. 2005, Fuller et al. 2005, Attwood et al. 2008, Gabriel et al. 2010, Batáry et al. 2011). In a meta-analysis of 66 publications, Bengtsson et al. (2005) found that organisms were 50% more abundant and species richness was 30% greater in organic farming systems than in conventional farming systems. Specifically, abundance and, in most cases, richness of birds, predatory insects, soil organisms, and plants responded positively to organic farming, while nonpredatory insects and pests responded negatively. The largest positive effects of organic farming on biodiversity were found in more intensively managed agricultural landscapes. Also using meta-analysis, Attwood et al. (2008) found arthropod predators and decomposers to be significantly more species rich under reduced-input cropping than conventional cropping, although arthropod herbivores (i.e., pests) were not. Similarly, in a meta-analysis of European agri-environment management (AEM) schemes (46 studies with 109 comparisons, 75% of which were organic versus conventional, but also including field-margin enhancements and reduced tillage, mowing, or grazing), Batáry et al. (2011) found that agri-environment management in croplands and grasslands significantly increased species richness and abundance of plants, pollinators, arthropods, and birds. For many of the taxonomic groups and response variables, agri-environment management had significant positive effects only in simple landscapes that contained <20% of seminatural habitats.

Three recent multiregion studies from Europe have also demonstrated the negative effects of both agricultural intensification (increased use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides combined with reduced use of diversified farming system techniques) and landscape simplification on components of biodiversity. on 153 cereal fields in five regions of Europe, Winqvist et al. (2011) found significant declines of plant and bird richness and abundance—but not of ground beetle—for conventionally managed farms relative to organically managed farms, and for farm sites in simplified landscapes (i.e., containing a larger proportion of arable land). In a related study on 270 cereal fields in nine regions of Europe, Geiger et al. (2010) found significant declines of plant, bird, and carabid beetle richness with decreasing proportions of the landscape under agri-environment management schemes, and with various metrics of local-scale management intensification. In a study of 192 fields over four regions in the United Kingdom, Gabriel et al. (2010) found support for significant positive effects of organic management at both local and landscape scales on a wide range of organisms. 

In the tropics, small-scale agroforests and home gardens are intensively managed, family farming systems where multipurpose native and non-native trees and shrubs are frequently integrated with annual and perennial crops and small livestock. While such agroforestry systems are typically less species rich than native forests (Scales and Marsden 2008, Jackson et al. 2009), agroforestry systems support significant components of tropical biodiversity (e.g., 25 to 65% of forest-dwelling plants and animals across 9 taxa and 14 countries (Bhagwhat et al. 2008: 36 studies, 69 comparisons)), as do landscape mosaics comprising farmlands and natural or seminatural habitats (Daily et al. 2001, Mayfield and Daily 2005). Management intensification in tropical agroforestry systems causes declines in species richness. Scales and Marsden (2008) reviewed studies of slash-and-burn fields, home gardens, and complex agroforestry systems (not including coffee), concluding that increased disturbance and reduced rates of forest regeneration decreased species richness in 83% of studies (N = 24). For coffee systems in Latin America, Philpott et al. (2008a), using meta-analysis, found that management intensification caused declines in bird (N = 12) but not ant (N = 4) species. Furthermore, for ants and birds, rustic coffee agroforestry systems (native forest canopy with low-density coffee understory) had similar or higher species richness relative to intact forests, but all other management forms (traditional polyculture, shade or sun monoculture) lost species relative to intact forests. Like studies from temperate regions, both local-scale management intensification and the proportion of forest cover in the landscape, and their interaction, all influence species richness in agroecosystems, as Anand et al. (2010) found using model selection in a quantitative synthesis of 17 studies across a wide range of taxa (30 comparisons) comparing different land uses (monoculture plantations, diverse plantings, logged forests, and forest fragments) in the Western Ghats, India. Forest cover at the landscape scale appeared to be the dominant factor influencing species richness patterns; at the local scale, monoculture plantations had the most consistently negative effect on species richness relative to other land uses.

Collectively these results show that the biodiversity benefits of diversified farming practices are significant at the local scale but tend to be most dramatic in simplified landscapes that are dominated by monoculture cropping systems with few natural habitat remnants. In contrast, complex landscapes with high percentages of noncrop habitats may already support high levels of biodiversity, both locally and regionally (Daily et al. 2001, Tscharntke et al. 2005, Batáry et al. 2010); thus local-scale diversification may have limited additional effects in such contexts. The cumulative effects of local-scale adoption of organic or diversified farming practices, however, can also have positive landscape-scale effects on biodiversity (e.g., Holzschuh et al. 2008, Gabriel et al. 2010, Geiger et al. 2010). In addition, the preservation of natural areas such as source habitats is critical for the maintenance of biodiversity (Batáry et al. 2011), including for ecosystem service providers like pollinators and natural enemies of arthropod pests (Kremen et al. 2002, Chaplin-Kramer et al. 2011). Biologically diversified farming systems are thus able to contribute to a high-quality matrix that enables the movement of forest organisms between remnant patches of natural vegetation (Perfecto and Vandermeer 2010). Nonetheless, agroecosystems and agronatural landscapes do not support all elements of biodiversity (Jackson et al. 2009); some species, including rare, endangered, or endemic species of greatest conservation concern, occur only in larger expanses of natural habitats (Kleijn et al. 2006, Bhagwat et al. 2008). Finally, these studies illustrate the concept that is core to diversified farming systems: cross-scale heterogeneity is critical for conserving biodiversity, which in turn underlies fundamental ecosystem services generating essential inputs to farming (Kremen et al. 2012).

Soil quality

Multiple studies of long-term field trials have demonstrated a strong positive impact of organic and diversified farming practices on the enhancement of key soil quality indicators (Bengtsson et al. 2005, Pimentel et al. 2005, Fliessbach et al. 2007). In particular, surface soils under organic management with high residue return rates or organic matter inputs generally have higher levels of soil organic matter (Franzluebbers 2004, Kong et al. 2005, Marriott and Wander 2006). Improved levels of soil organic matter generally enhance soil quality with respect to ten critical and interrelated functions within agroecosystems: biogeochemical cycling and retention of nutrients, soil aggregate formation and stability, water infiltration and water-holding capacity, decontamination of water, pH buffering, erosion reduction, and promotion of plant growth (Mäder et al. 2002, Weil and Magdoff 2004). Organic management can increase soil organic matter through recycling of crop residues and manure, green manuring, cover cropping, vegetated fallow periods, and the addition of compost. For example, in the ongoing Rodale trial involving the comparison of two organic systems with complex rotations that include legume cover crops (one with manure and one without) to a conventionally farmed corn/soy rotation, soil carbon levels (a proxy for soil organic matter) increased significantly, i.e., by 15.9 to 30% in the organic systems compared with no significant increase in the conventional system, after 15 years (Drinkwater et al. 1998). Using various indicators of soil organic matter in a quantitative synthesis of nine long-term study systems in the United States, Marriott and Wander (2006) similarly found that organic systems with legume cover crop rotations had significantly higher soil organic matter in surface soils than did paired conventional systems, irrespective of whether the organic treatment included manure. 

Long-term trials also show that soils under organic management have greater abundance, diversity, and activity of soil microorganisms and macroorganisms responsible for nutrient cycling (Reganold et al. 1987, Mäder at al. 2002, Edmeades 2003). Further, using genetic techniques, Reganold et al. (2010) found that the abundance and diversity of functionally important genes involved in nitrogen, carbon, sulfur, and phosphorus transformations and cycling; metal reduction and resistance; and organic xenobiotic degradation were significantly greater on organic than conventional strawberry fields. Thus diversified farming system practices promote below-ground biodiversity, and this biodiversity in soils is probably a critical functional component of these farming systems, although this topic requires further exploration. In addition, soils under long-term organic management have improved physical, chemical, and biological properties. Specifically, percolation rates, aggregate stability, micronutrients, and root colonization bymycorrhizae fungi were all significantly higher in organic farming systems than in conventional farming systems (Reganold et al. 1987, Mäder et al. 2002, Edmeades 2003, Verbruggen et al. 2010), leading to better functional outcomes, such as reduced rates of soil erosion. For example, a 37-year-long trial revealed four-fold lower rates of annual water erosion on organic farms (8.3 ton/ha) than on conventional farms (32.4 ton/ha) (Reganold et al. 1987).

Nutrient management

Various diversified farming system practices increase the uptake of nutrients into crop biomass and/or soils, thus enhancing fertilizer use efficiency while reducing loss of nutrients to air and water, which are two critical agronomic and environmental management goals. Conventional agricultural systems, especially grains, have experienced dramatically declining fertilizer use efficiencies over several decades, requiring large increases in synthetic fertilizer application rates simply to maintain yields, with attendant increases in nutrient loss (Tilman et al. 2002, Miao et al. 2011). Loss of agricultural nitrogen and phosphorus to air and water cause severe environmental and human health problems, including eutrophication of fresh and marine waters, the emission of greenhouse gasses, and the depletion of stratospheric ozone (Tilman et al. 2002, Townsend et al. 2003, Diaz and Rosenberg 2008, Park et al. 2012). Thus diversified farming system practices can contribute simultaneously to efficient use of nutrients and to mitigation of point-source pollution.

Intercropping can increase nutrient use efficiency through several mechanisms, which may be particularly important in the tropics and sub-tropics where soils are naturally low in available nutrients. No meta-analysis was available on the effects of intercropping on nutrients; therefore we relied on reviews and primary studies. First, by growing crops with different rooting depths (including combinations of row and tree crops), the combined cropping system can exploit a larger soil volume and harvest nutrients (as well as water) from different soil strata (Hauggard-Neilsen and Jensen 2005). Crops that normally root at similar depths when planted as monocultures may root to different depths to avoid competition (e.g., pea and barley) when intercropped. Second, one crop can facilitate the uptake of nutrients by another crop. For example, in a field trial, Li et al. (2007) showed definitively that in a fava bean/maize intercrop, fava bean mobilized phosphorus that was taken up by maize, increasing maize yields by 43%. Fava bean also over-yielded because its deeper root system allowed it to obtain nutrients not available to maize. Similarly, Knudsen et al. (2004) showed that grains intercropped with legumes used nitrogen resources more efficiently because the amount of N fixed by the legume increased relative to its N-fixation in a sole-cropping system. Finally, improved nutrient use efficiency of combined cropping systems can produce a cobenefit of reducing soil nitrate loads and thus the potential for nitrate leaching (Zhang and Li 2003).

Studying the effect of crop rotation on nutrient management, Gardner et al. (2009) conducted a meta-analysis of studies that followed the fate of 15N isotope tracer in crop biomass and soils (35 responses). They found that, relative to continuous cropping or simplified rotations such as corn/soy, more diverse rotations (including those with cover crops) significantly increased 15N recovery, i.e., by 17% in the grain cash crop alone and by 30% across all crops and soils. Comparing organic with inorganic sources of fertilizer (36 responses), it was further found that crops fertilized with legume residues and/or animal manures retained 72% more nitrogen in the grain crop by the second year than crops fertilized with inorganic N, although this increased retention followed an initial reduction in retention in Year 1. (No significant differences in yield were found among systems in either year.) Overall, use of organic fertilizers increased 15N recovery by 42% in all crops and soils relative to inorganic fertilizer use. Further, they found that both complex crop rotations and use of organic fertilizers had significantly larger effects on retaining N in the system compared with several, but not all, practices typically used in conventional systems to manage nutrients. Specifically, these diversified farming system practices had greater effects than reducing N application rates (N = 86), using a nitrification inhibitor (N = 26) or improved chemical forms of synthetic N (N = 22). Diversified farming system practices had equivalent effects to spring application of inorganic N (N = −18) or spatial targeting of inorganic N close to roots (N = 24). To conclude, the results of this meta-analysis suggest that diversified farming system practices can both enhance the uptake of N by the primary crop as well as reduce overall nutrient losses and pollution.

In comparing organic agriculture with conventional agriculture, Mondelaers et al. (2009) found, in a meta-analysis of 14 studies, significantly lower nitrate leaching for organic farming systems. The main drivers behind higher nitrate leaching in conventional farming systems include greater application rates of concentrated soluble fertilizers, lower use of cover crops that can scavenge residual soil N, lower C to N ratio of fertilizers, and higher animal stocking densities per hectare (Mondelaers et al. 2009, Brennan and Boyd 2012). However, these results were heterogeneous, possibly due to among-study differences in soil type, farming system, region, study method, and time of measurement, and, according to the authors, should be interpreted cautiously. Further, while mean values of nitrate leaching from organic fields were less than half that of conventional, the two systems demonstrated near equivalence in nitrate leaching per unit of yield (due to the higher yields measured on conventional fields). In the same analysis, Mondelaers et al. (2009) found no significant differences in phosphorus loss between organic and conventional farming systems (N = 12). However, because phosphorus has low solubility and is primarily transported on soil particles, the demonstrated lower rates of soil erosion in diversified farming systems might result in reduced phosphorus pollution of surface waters (Tilman et al. 2002). While evidence that organic management per se reduces these pollutants sufficiently is weak (Mondelaers et al. 2009), use of organic management or other diversified farming system techniques (see above) at the field scale, in combination with landscape-scale diversified farming system practices such as vegetative buffers, should provide sufficient filtration to reduce nutrient pollution. In a quantitative synthesis of 73 studies, Zhang et al. (2010) found that vegetated buffers of 30 m removed 85% or more of nitrogen, phosphorus, sediment, and pesticide pollutants under favorable slope conditions.

At the global scale, both nitrogen and phosphorus are limiting resources for crop production, and any assessments of organic and conventional contributions to future food production must take into account the sourcing of these essential fertilizers. In conventional systems, use of synthetic nitrogenous fertilizers derived from the Haber–Bosch process have greatly expanded agricultural capacity, but production of synthetic fertilizers is energy intensive and could be limited in the next 50 to 100 years by diminishing supplies of fossil fuels (Crews and Peoples 2004). Organic systems obtain nitrogen through animal or green manures plus nitrogen fixation during intercropping or crop rotations. In a quantitative synthesis, Badgley et al. (2007) estimated that cover cropping with legumes between cropping cycles could provide sufficient nitrogen through biological fixation to support conversion to organic agriculture at the global scale. However, this estimate did not take into account geographic variation in temperature and water availability that would preclude use of off-season cover crops in some regions (Connor 2008). More cautious estimates of the capacity of leguminous cover crops to supply nitrogen requirements suggest that under selected scenarios, such as the reduction of food waste or the adoption of less meat-intensive diets, this farming practice could greatly reduce or eliminate dependence on synthetic nitrogen supplies (Crews and Peoples 2004). Mined phosphorus is projected to “peak” around 2030 (Cordell et al. 2009), affecting both organic and conventional production. However, some agroecological methods (i.e., intercropping, manuring, rotations, cover cropping with legumes) can improve phosphorus use efficiency or provide a source of recycled phosphorus to minimize the need for mined phosphorus (Li et al. 2007, Conyers and Moody 2009). Therefore, diversified farming systems may be more resilient to peaking phosphorus supplies than conventional agriculture.

Water-holding capacity

The positive impact of diversified farming practices on soil organic matter content (Marriott and Wander 2006) can also lead to higher available water for plants (available water capacity) in surface soils, which may positively influence resistance and resilience of crop plants to drought conditions (Lotter et al. 2003, Weil and Magdoff 2004, Liu et al. 2007). Hudson (1994) has shown that in all soil texture groups, as soil organic matter content increased from 0.5 to 3%, available water capacity more than doubled. In long-term trials measuring the relative water-holding capacity of soils, diversified farming systems have shown a clear advantage over conventional farming systems. For example, in a 37-year trial, Reganold et al. (1987) found significantly higher soil organic matter levels and 42% higher surface soil moisture content in organically managed plots than in conventional plots. In a 21-year study in Switzerland, Mäder et al. (2002) reported 20 to 40% higher water-holding capacity in organically managed soils than in conventionally managed soils. Recent research has suggested, however, that prior studies have not adequately measured the effects of agricultural practices like no-till and organic farming on soil organic matter in deeper soil layers (Dolan et al. 2006, Kravchencko and Roberts 2011, Syswerda et al. 2011). Therefore, although organic and no-till farming systems have clear advantages for soil organic matter accumulation (and thus water-holding capacity) in surface soils (Franzluebbers 2004, Marriott and Wander 2006), additional sampling at greater soil depths is an important, priority research area.

Weed control

Two central practices of diversified farming systems—crop rotation (temporal diversification) and intercropping (spatial diversification—can greatly suppress weed densities in comparison to monocultures (Barberi 2002). In a review of comparative studies assessing the effects of crop rotations versus monoculture on weeds, weed seed densities were found to be lower in 75% of the studies and equivalent in 25% (12 studies), while emerged weed densities were lower in 77.7% of the studies, higher in 3.7%, and equivalent in 18.5% (29 studies) (Liebman and Dyck 1993). The types of crops used in the rotation are critical, not only for weed management, but also to manage soil pathogens and fertility. For example, a rotation including a legume, row, sod, and cereal or grass crop provides, sequentially, nitrogen fixation for soil fertility, cultivation-stimulating weed germination, weed suppression due to smothering, and restoration of soil organic matter, and weed suppression due to allelopathy or high planting densities (Liebman and Dyck 1993). Additionally, the different crop types in the rotation collectively promote the development of more diverse weed communities but with fewer individuals per species (e.g., Sonoskie et al. 2006), thus potentially lessening the competitive effects on crop yield (Barberi 2002). In contrast, continuous monocropping can produce highly dense, locally adapted populations of single weed species that compete strongly with the crop (Barberi 2002). 

Comparing intercropping versus monoculture, weed biomass was lower in 87%, higher in 7.4%, and variable in 5.5% of the 54 studies in which a main crop was intercropped with a “smother” crop, i.e., one purposefully introduced for weed control (Liebman and Dyck 1993). The intercropped weed suppressor also provides other benefits, such as forage, food, or nitrogen fixation, and examples show that such systems can be economically superior to sole crop systems (e.g., chickpea and wheat intercrop in India (Banik et al. 2006), and can provide equivalent yields to conventional monoculture with herbicide (e.g., Enache and Ilnicki 1990). Weed suppression was more variable when intercrops were composed of two or more main crops, rather than composed of a main crop and a smother crop. In comparison to monocultures of each crop, weed biomass was lower in the intercrop in 50% of the studies, intermediate in 41.6%, and higher in 8.3% (24 studies; Liebman and Dyck 1993). 

Increasingly, agroecological studies utilize multiple successive tactics to combat weeds, using knowledge of weed life cycles to identify strategies for control (Shennan 2008). For example, in the Great Plains of the United States, researchers aimed to reduce: (1) the seedbank, (2) seedling establishment, and (3) seed production of weeds by replacing a simple winter wheat fallow with a more complex rotation scheme. Within successive 2-year cycles of cool season crops (winter wheat or fallow) versus warm season crops (corn, sunflower, or proso millet), growers rotated crops to achieve varied planting and harvest dates, used a no-till system, and altered planting densities and timing to improve competitiveness of the crop. These combined tactics allowed growers to reduce herbicide applications by half and increase economic returns four-fold, due both to increased yields and lower input costs (Anderson 2005).

While weeds can reduce crop yields through competition with the crop, there are also known positive effects of weeds (Shennan 2008). Weeds can draw pests away from crops. Or they can provide habitat and floral resources for natural enemies that control pests (Norris and Kogan 2005), for pollinator species that provide crop pollination (Carvalheiro et al. 2011), and for other biodiversity (Marshall et al. 2003). They can provide important food or medicinal resources for humans in or around crop fields (e.g., purslane (Altieri et al. 1987)). Conventional cropping systems generally maintain much lower weed abundance than organic systems (Gabriel et al. 2006).

Alternatively, weeds can enhance pests or diseases and/or reduce the effectiveness of ecosystem service providers, for example by competing with crops for pollination services. Given the multiple interactions between weeds, other pests or diseases, and ecosystem service providers, it is clear that the study of weed management cannot occur in isolation from other components of the farming system. Whole-system, integrative studies of diversified agriculture are needed in order to effectively support multifunctional agriculture (e.g., Box 1; Norris and Kogan 2005, Shennan 2008, Tomich et al. 2011). 
Box 1. The push–pull system for control of pests of corn and sorghum in Africa

Researchers worked in East Africa for the last 15 years to develop an agroecological pest-management solution for stem borers and striga weed, two major pests of maize and sorghum, crops on which millions of the poorest people in eastern and southern Africa rely (Khan et al. 2011). Yield losses to stem borers typically range from 20 to 40% but can reach 80%, while losses from striga are even higher, and when these pests co-occur, farmers can lose their entire crop (Khan et al. 2000). The push–pull method developed by researchers manages stem borer pests through a stimulo-deterrent chemical ecology strategy. Selected fodder species and wild grasses are intercropped in maize fields to “push” stem borer pests from the system, while other grasses are used as trap crops to “pull” the stem borers away, protecting the crop from infestation (Shelton and Badenes-Perez 2006). Intercropped plants that not only repel stem borers but also attract natural enemies can further decrease stem borer densities by enhancing parasitism rates (Khan et al. 1997). Two leguminous plants, Desmodium uncinatum and D. intortum, are also intercropped; these fix nitrogen and produce root exudates that limit the reproductive success of striga weed (Khan et al. 2000). In addition to enhancing crop yields, the push–pull strategy has been shown to improve small livestock production, conserve soil resources, enhance functional biodiversity, and increase incomes and women’s empowerment (Khan and Pickett 2004). As of 2010, the push–pull system has been adopted by over 30,000 smallholder farmers in east Africa, where maize yields have increased by 1 to 3.5 t/ha, on average, with minimal external inputs (Khan et al. 2011).

Disease control

In a large-scale study in China, Zhu et al. (2000) showed that, compared with monoculture, interplanting resistant rice varieties with disease-susceptible varieties produced 89% greater yield and reduced rice blast disease, which is caused by aerial fungal pathogens, by 94% in susceptible varieties. By the second year of the project, growers no longer utilized foliar fungicides and the program expanded from 3000 to 40,000 ha. Similarly, in the former eastern Germany, mixed cultivars of barley were used to suppress powdery mildew disease, and disease incidence and fungicide use dropped by 80% while the area of mixed cultivation expanded to 350,000 ha over a 6-year period (see also other examples in de Vallavielle-Pope 2004). 

Further, for soilborne or splashborne diseases, Hiddink et al. (2010) found that mixed cropping systems (including strip intercropping, row intercropping, relay intercropping, and intercropping of genetic variants) reduced disease in 74.5% of cases in comparison to monoculture (19.6% neutral; 5.9% negative; in a vote count of 36 studies comprising 51 comparisons). Host dilution was frequently proposed as the mechanism for reducing disease incidence of both soilborne and splash-dispersed pathogens. Other mechanisms, such as allelopathy and microbial antagonists, are thought to affect disease severity in diversified farming systems (Stone et al. 2004). Although these results are encouraging, in most cases levels of disease suppression were relatively modest (<50%) compared with the sole crop, and thus while reduced, soil pathogens could still depress yields significantly in intercrops. In a few cases, mixed cropping resulted in complete elimination of the disease (e.g., Zewde et al. 2007). The effectiveness of disease suppression is likely to be greatly influenced both by the spacing and types of crops in the mixed cropping system. For example, strip intercropping provides fewer opportunities for interactions between crop roots than row intercropping. Further, root architecture of component crops influences the degree of interactions with one another and the microbial community, and thus the rate of disease spread. 

Although use of mixed-crop strategies is not yet a reliable strategy for control of soil pathogens (although it is promising and warrants more investigation), crop rotations are already widely utilized for management of soil pathogens, within both small-scale and industrial agriculture (e.g., corn/soybean rotation in the Midwest United States). Crop rotations are widely understood to interrupt the build-up of soil pathogens, diseases vectors, and other pests while making more efficient use of available nitrogen (Bezdicek and Granatstein 1989, Francis 2004, see also Shennan et al. 2009). However, for certain crop–pathogen combinations (e.g., Gaeumannomyces graminis andwheat), continuous monocropping ultimately induces natural disease suppression, and crop rotation interrupts this process, thus increasing disease incidence (Hiddink et al. 2010). In induced resistance, prior exposure to a pathogen or parasite results in resistance against subsequent challenges by the same pathogen or parasite (Vallad and Goodman 2004). Diversified farming system practices have not been shown to consistentlyinduce disease resistance across a wide range of crops (Tamm et al. 2011), despite their positive effects on disease prevention and suppression (see above) and on soil quality (Liu et al. 2007, Birkhofer et al. 2008, Verbruggen et al. 2010). Moreover, in a recent study of the impact of short-term and long-term soil fertility management strategies on induced suppression of airborne and soilborne diseases, Tamm et al. (2011) found that site-specific physical factors such as soil type (i.e., those not influenced by agronomic practices) had a greater impact than agronomic practices. 

In conclusion, while mixed cropping and crop rotation strategies appear to be among the few viable economic alternatives to chemical control of above-ground and below-ground crop pathogens, far more work remains to be done to design consistently effective disease management systems (Hiddink et al. 2010). Furthermore, given that mixed cropping and crop rotation practices influence many ecosystem processes and services (Table 1), it is clear that in order to develop cost-effective diversification strategies, whole-system agroecological studies that consider multiple interactions simultaneously are needed (Shennan 2008, Tomich et al. 2011).

Arthropod pest control

Over the last 40 years, many studies have evaluated the effects of local-scale (i.e., field-level) diversity on densities of herbivore pests (Andow 1991, Altieri and Nicholls 2004). Meta-analyses suggest that diversification schemes generally achieve significant positive outcomes including natural enemy enhancement, reduction of herbivore abundance, and reduction of crop damage, from a combination of bottom-up and top-down effects (Letourneau et al. 2011). Specifically, in a meta-analysis of 21 studies comparing pest suppression in polyculture versus monoculture, Tonhasca and Byrne (1994) found that polycultures significantly reduced pest densities by 64%. In a later meta-analysis with a nonoverlapping set of studies (45 articles comprising 552 total comparisons), Letourneau et al. (2011) found a 44% increase in abundance of natural enemies (148 comparisons), a 54% increase in herbivore mortality (221 comparisons), and a 23% reduction in crop damage (99 comparisons) on farms with species-rich vegetational diversification systems (including within or around the field) than on farms with species-poor systems. There were relatively fewer comparisons of yield (87); crop diversity exhibited a negative effect on yield when experiments were substitutive (replacing crop plants on which yield measurements were based with other plants), but had a significant positive effect when experiments were additive (Letourneau et al. 2011). 

Other local-scale studies have compared pest-control services on organic farms and conventional farms and related these services to the structure of the arthropod community. For tomatoes, organic farms displayed an entirely different arthropod community structure than did conventional farms, with higher species richness for both pests and natural enemies, and higher abundance of natural enemies (Letourneau and Goldstein 2001). However, no differences were found between these same farms in the level of damage by arthropod pests, which the authors interpreted as evidence that natural enemies provided a pest-control service on these organic fields equivalent to that established through pesticide use on conventional fields (Drinkwater et al. 1995). (Not all organic growers relied solely on control provided by natural enemies, however; several used allowed organic treatments such as soap sprays and Bacillus thurigensis). No meta-analysis of studies examining pest control on organic crops versus conventional crops yet exists (Letourneau and Bothwell 2008). To assess the generality of the relationship found between natural enemy richness and damage levels found in the tomato study, Letourneau et al. (2009) instead conducted a meta-analysis of 62 studies in natural areas (100 comparisons) and agricultural areas (126 comparisons); they obtained a significant positive relationship between the species richness of natural enemies and the level of herbivore suppression both overall and in agricultural areas alone. In experimental work, Crowder et al. (2010) found that community evenness, i.e., the distribution of abundances of species in a community, rather than richness of arthropod natural enemies (above ground) and pathogens (below ground), was critical in determining the level of pest suppression of the potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata), and that organic fields had significantly higher evenness than conventional fields, both in the potato system, and in a meta-analysis of 38 studies (48 comparisons). Thus, farming practices that encourage species richness, such as winter cover cropping (Letourneau and Goldstein 2001), landscape-scale diversification (Geiger et al. 2010), or reduced pesticide use (Drinkwater et al. 1995, Bengtsson et al. 2005, Attwood et al. 2008, Geiger et al. 2010), may all contribute to development of arthropod communities with the potential to provide more effective pest-control services (Letourneau et al. 2009, Crowder et al. 2010). 

Most field-scale biological control studies conducted prior to circa 2000 failed to measure the influence of the surrounding landscape on pest regulation (Bianchi et al. 2006), but recent studies have shown that landscape complexity—the quality and quantity of noncrop vegetation around a farm—can significantly affect pest control (Thies and Tscharntke 1999, Thies et al. 2005, Gardiner et al. 2009). However, a recent meta-analysis of pest-control studies (23 studies with 41 responses) comparing sites in differing landscape contexts found that there were no significant effects for pest responses (abundance, crop damage) even though natural enemy abundance, diversity, and predation or parasitism rates increased significantly on average with landscape complexity (38 studies with 118 responses (Chaplin-Kramer et al. 2011)). The lack of a consistent pest response to landscape complexity may be due to the paucity of studies that have measured pest responses at the landscape scale; further research is needed. Alternatively, while the more abundant and diverse natural enemy communities found in complex landscapes (Chaplin-Kramer et al. 2011) may result in greater pest suppression (Letourneau et al. 2009), these effects may be masked by greater overall pest abundances in such landscapes (Thies et al. 2005, Chaplin-Kramer et al. 2011). Thus greater pest control may be occurring in such landscapes, but it may not have been detected.

Several recent large-scale pest-control studies, however, do detect the effects of diversified farming practices at the landscape scale. Geiger et al. (2010), working on 270 cereal fields in nine regions of Europe, found that the potential for pest control (measured as the mean survival time of aphids placed at each site) was positively correlated with the percentage of the surrounding landscape using agri-environment management practices, and was negatively correlated with the amounts of active ingredient of pesticide applied at the site. Meehan et al. (2011), in a study covering seven states in the Midwestern United States, estimated that growers incurred substantially higher costs due to the loss of natural habitat, and due to decreased yields and increased insecticide applications. The cost equaled US$48/ha of agricultural land and totaled US$34 to 103 million dollars/year over the entire region. In conclusion, there is significant evidence that local-scale vegetation diversity enhances pest control by a modest amount (Letourneau et al. 2011), and there is growing evidence of landscape-level effects (Geiger et al. 2010, Meehan et al. 2011). Most importantly, for many systems, there is still limited empirical information to guide growers on how best to utilize diversified farming techniques to consistently regulate arthropod pest populations below economic thresholds; such work is highly system specific, requiring detailed agroecological investigation (e.g., Vandermeer et al. 2010, and see the sidebar). Such detailed investigations should be a high priority for research funding.

Pollination services

Both meta-analysis and quantitative syntheses across multiple crop types and biomes strongly show that wild pollinator communities decrease significantly in abundance and richness in agricultural landscapes with extreme habitat loss or increased distance to natural habitat (meta-analyses: Ricketts et al. 2008, 23 studies; Winfree et al. 2009, 54 studies) (quantitative synthesis: Garibaldi et al. 2011, 29 studies). These landscape effects on wild pollinator communities translate to small but significant reductions in the magnitude and stability of pollination services provided to crops (mean of −16 and −9% respectively at 1-km isolation from natural habitat), despite the ubiquity of managed honey bees which have been brought into farming landscapes explicitly to provide pollination services (Garibaldi et al. 2011). Managed honey bees have also suffered in recent years from various diseases, pesticides, and other environmental stresses, and are in decline in many countries around the globe (Neumann and Carreck 2010); therefore the contributions of wild pollinators to crop pollination (comprised of many other bee species as well as other insects) have taken on new significance (Klein et al. 2007, Potts et al. 2010, Eilers et al. 2011).

As with other components of biodiversity, pollinator communities were richer and more abundant with agri-environment management schemes (primarily organic), but this effect was only significant in simple landscapes (<20% seminatural habitats) (meta-analysis: Batáry et al. 2011; abundance, 11 studies; richness, 13 studies). Several studies have shown that organic management can have a positive effect on pollinator richness and abundance at both the local and landscape scales (Holzschuh et al. 2008, Gabriel et al. 2010). In 42 wheat fields studied in three widely separated regions of Germany, organic management increased the richness of pollinators by 60% and abundance by 130 to 136% (depending on the taxon) relative to that in conventional fields. In addition to this local effect, increasing the proportion of organic fields in the landscape from 5 to 20% further increased pollinator richness and abundance by >60% on both organic and conventional farm fields. The authors attributed these spillover effects to the enhancement of the diversity and abundance of floral resources in the organic fields that provide nectar and pollen for pollinator species, rather than to the reduction of insecticide use (Holzschuh et al. 2007, 2008). An effective management technique for enhancing pollinator richness and abundance on farms is to plant flower-rich hedgerows, grassy borders, or in-field insectary strips (e.g., Potts et al. 2009), although it is not yet known whether such techniques simply concentrate existing pollinators at the floral resources, or increase pollinator population sizes, thus potentially enhancing pollination services in adjacent crop fields. 

Differences in bee communities due to local management can translate into differences in pollination services provided; in Canada, an experimental study revealed that seed set was on average 3 to 6 times lower on conventional and GMO canola fields using insecticides and herbicides than on organic fields, and this reduced seed set was strongly correlated with reduced abundances of native pollinators (Morandin and Winston 2005). There are still relatively few studies, however, that have measured the effects of local-scale management actions on pollination services. In those studies that do, landscape-scale variables overshadow the effects of local-scale management (e.g., Kremen et al. 2002, Carvalheiro et al. 2010). Thus there is a need for additional highly replicated studies that examine both local and landscape factors (such as those conducted by Holzschuh et al. 2008 and Gabriel et al. 2010) and that study not only pollinator communities but also pollination services.

Carbon sequestration

Soils contain the largest pool of carbon actively turning over in the global carbon cycle (Weil and Magdoff 2004). Transformation of natural habitats to agriculture reduces soil carbon and is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions (Fargione et al. 2008). However, through proper management, Lal (2004) estimates that the world’s agricultural soils have the potential to absorb an estimated 50 to 66% of the historic loss of 55 to 78 gigatons of carbon caused by prior conversion of natural habitats, and to mitigate an estimated 5 to 15% of annual global fossil fuel emissions. Agronomic practices thought to significantly increase the storage of soil carbon include practices that reduce disturbance and/or practices that increase organic inputs to the soil. Those include no-till, low-till, and perennial-based agriculture, cover cropping, fallow rotations, application of manures, green manures or composts, improved grazing practices, efficient irrigation, agroforestry, and the regeneration of woodlands (Lal 2004). Some of these practices enhance vegetative diversity (e.g., agroforestry) while others enhance soil biodiversity (manures and compost). 

Earlier work suggested that reduced or no-till agriculture would have the largest effects on carbon sequestration (Lal 2004), because it tends to enhance soil carbon in the surface layers of the soils (e.g., by a mean of 31 ± 6.4 (SE) g/m2/y, 136 studies (Franzluebbers 2004)). However, such conclusions have since been questioned, because the sampling of soils under different management regimes may frequently be too limited to permit detection of significant differences (Kravchenko and Roberts 2011). Limited sampling is especially problematic in the deeper soil layers, where the amounts of carbon stored are both smaller and more variable (Syswerda et al. 2011). Knowledge about carbon stored in the deeper layers is particularly important, because management practices that enhance carbon in surface layers, such as no till or low till, may actually reduce carbon storage at deeper layers (i.e., by reducing the incorporation and decomposition of plant materials and subsequent root growth), leading to no net difference in stored carbon between management practices (Dolan et al. 2006, Franzluebbers 2004). Further study of how diversified farming system practices influence soil carbon up to a 1-m soil depth is merited, not only to assess the potential of agricultural soils to mitigate greenhouse gases, but because increasing soil carbon can enhance a wide range of ecological services including increased food production (e.g., increases of 1 ton/ha in degraded croplands can double yields of staple crops like wheat and corn (Lal 2004). Again, a holistic perspective is needed, because farming practices that affect soil organic carbon influence multiple ecosystem services simultaneously. For example, while no-till agriculture may not result in a net increase in carbon sequestration when deeper soil layers are considered, no-till or low-till agriculture can protect surface soils from erosion, promote water infiltration, and, over time, increase soil fertility by enhancing nitrogen stocks (Franzluebbers 2004).

Energy-use efficiency and reduction of global-warming potential

Over the last 15 years, many attempts have been made to measure the global-warming potential of conventional and diversified farming systems by calculating relative energy use, energy-use efficiency, and the outputs of key greenhouse gasses including carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and/or nitrous oxide (N2O) (Lynch et al. 2011). In a major review of approximately 130 studies, Lynch et al. (2011) analyzed farm-level energy use and global-warming potential of organic and conventional farming systems, including field, fruit, and vegetable crops, and beef, hog, poultry, and dairy production. In general, organic farming systems had significantly lower energy use and greenhouse gas emissions per hectare, and higher energy efficiency (energy input/output) per unit of product. These differences exceeded, often by a substantial margin, the 20% threshold set by the authors as a minimum level needed for policy action. Avoidance of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, which require large amounts of energy to produce (Pelletier et al. 2011), and lower use of feed concentrates, were largely responsible for the improved energy performance of the organic farming systems per unit of land or product. Results were more variable for global-warming potential than for energy indicators, however, due in part to large uncertainties in the measurement of N2O emissions from soils and manure. In some studies, especially those of hog, poultry, and dairy production, organic methods produced higher emissions per unit of product, often due to lower rates of feed conversion. Contrary to expectations, increased tillage in organic farming systems for weed control and crop rotations was not a significant contributor to on-farm energy use, nor did these practices lead to net reductions in soil carbon, due to the mitigating effects of green manures (Lynch et al. 2011).

Resiliency to environmental disturbances: severe weather conditions

Recent research has demonstrated that diversified farming systems exhibit greater levels of resilience to environmental disturbances across multiple ecosystem services and thus may serve as a cost-effective adaptation strategy in the face of global climate change (Lin 2011, Tengo and Belfrage 2004). The enhanced soil quality of diversified farms (see above) can improve key soil functions such as water storage and infiltration, thereby increasing ground-water recharge while reducing surface run-off and erosion (Weil and Magdoff 2004, Pimentel et al. 2005), and thus enhancing the resiliency of the farming system to droughts and deluges. For example, over a 5-year period that included three drought years, legume and legume+manure-based organic systems from the 21-year Rodale trial captured, respectively, 16 to 25% more water than the conventional system (Lotter et al. 2003). In four of five drought years, maize yield was significantly greater in organic systems than in conventional systems. In the most extreme drought year, mean corn yields were 137% higher in the legume+manure-based organic system than in the conventional system (but were reduced relative to conventional in the legume treatment due to weed competition), while mean soybean yields were 196% (and 152%) higher. The enhanced water storage and infiltration properties of organic soils also improved the response to an extreme rainfall event. Water capture in the organic plots was approximately double that in the conventional plots, indicating higher rates of percolation, lower volumes of surface runoff, and reduced rates of erosion (Lotter et al. 2003, Pimentel et al. 2005). 

Lin (2007) showed that more structurally complex (i.e., diversified) coffee-farming systems limited extreme temperature fluctuations and kept crops closer to ideal growing conditions when contrasted with low-shade coffee systems in Chiapas, Mexico. Further, multistory high-shade systems better protected crops from water stress during drought periods due to reduced evaporation and improved soil infiltration rates (Lin et al. 2008). 

Using a participatory research approach, Holt-Giménez (2002) found significant differences in the resistance and resilience of conventional and diversified farming systems in Nicaragua following Hurricane Mitch (October 1998). on 880 paired plots in 181 separate communities, diversified farms were found to have a 49% lower incidence of landslides, 18% less arable land loss to landslides, 20% more vegetative cover, 47% less rill erosion, 69% less gully erosion, and 40% more topsoil compared with conventional farms. Following Hurricane Mitch, diversified farms suffered lower economic losses than conventional farms. The enhanced resistance and resilience of diversified plots was more pronounced with increasing levels of storm intensity, slope, and number of years under diversified farming practices. Similarly, Philpott et al. (2008b) found that coffee farms managed for greater vegetative complexity experienced fewer landslides during Hurricane Stan (October 2005) in Chiapas, Mexico, although this did not translate into economic differences among farm management types given that few landslides occurred within the coffee-production regions of the farms. Rosset et al. (2011) found that farms with greater “agroecological integration” recovered more rapidly from hurricane disturbance in Cuba.

Crop yield

Badgley et al. (2007) conducted a quantitative synthesis of studies measuring the relative yields of organic and conventional farms across many cropping systems. In developed nations they found that crop yields were 8.6% lower for organic systems than for conventional systems (with a 95% confidence interval of 4.7 to 12.5%, based on 138 comparisons in 43 studies). In developing nations, they found a mean yield increase of 174.6% (with a 95% confidence interval of 156.0 to 191.2%) when diversified farming practices were employed, compared with resource-poor (generally subsistence) farming strategies (138 comparisons from 29 studies). These results were contested, however, by authors who suggested that organic management would produce similar yields only if off-farm sources of manure were utilized, or when utilizing leguminous noncrop rotations that would decrease overall yields over the full crop rotation cycle (Kirchmann et al. 2008). Subsequently, two new studies (de Ponti et al. 2012, Seufert et al. 2012) critiqued the Badgley et al. (2007) study, primarily based on the choice of studies included in the Badgley study. Based on data quality criteria and a stricter definition of organic and conventional systems, De Ponti et al. (2012) rejected 86% of the studies utilized by Badgley et al. (2007); in their quantitative synthesis, they found an average 20% (with a 95% confidence interval of 17.8 to 22.2%) yield gap (based on 362 comparisons from 135 studies post 2004). Seufert et al. (2012) conducted a meta-analysis utilizing an overlapping but different set of studies than those used by de Ponti et al. (2012). While also requiring a strict definition of organic versus conventional, the meta-analysis further required that studies report both a mean and error term, resulting in 316 comparisons from 66 studies. Seufert et al. found an overall yield gap of 25% (with a 95% confidence interval from 21 to 29%) (Seufert et al. 2012). L. Ponisio and C. Kremen (personal observation) noted that Seufert et al. (2012) used some yield data as the baseline for multiple comparisons (more than 50% of observations), which might result in an overestimate of the size and significance of differences between organic and conventional yields. The question of how organic and conventional yields compare is still uncertain due to the small number of available studies that present appropriate data for making this comparison; this is a key area for additional research. 

Conclusions varied widely among the de Ponti et al. (2012), Seufert et al. (2012), and Badgley et al. (2007) studies regarding differences in yield gaps among developed and developing countries. Most of the data in the Seufert et al. and de Ponti et al. analyses were from the developed world (80 to 90%), whereas the Badgley et al. (2007) study included a larger proportion of responses from developing countries (45%). Seufert et al. found a significantly greater yield gap for developing (43%) than developed (20%) countries, whereas de Ponti et al. found a slight, but nonsignificant, reduction in yield gap for developing countries relative to developed. Seufert et al. attributed their finding of a larger yield gap in developing countries to the atypically high conventional yields found in those studies, relative to local averages. In contrast, Badgley et al. found a large yield gain for organic systems in developing countries (174%). The switch from yield gain to yield loss between the Badgley et al. and the other studies can be attributed to the different ways in which each study drew comparisons among farming systems. The two recent papers utilized strict definitions of organic and conventional systems. In contrast, Badgley et al. compared resource-conserving agroecological methods that were not necessarily strictly organic against subsistence or low-input conventional systems, rather than against high input conventional methods. The results in Badgley et al. therefore imply that widespread implementation of diversified farming systems by smallholders in developing countries might result in substantial gains for global food production because, by one estimate, 50% of smallholders in developing nations do not currently use resource-conserving practices (Altieri and Toledo 2011). However, many of the studies from developing countries utilized by Badgley et al. (2007) lacked appropriate controls, and therefore we lack a strong quantitative assessment of the potential for diversified farming systems to enhance food production in developing countries (Seufert et al. 2012). 

Other management factors may modify the organic to conventional yield gap, such as the length of time under organic management. For some management systems or crops, organic yields nearly rival conventional yields (Seufert et al. 2012; L. Ponisio and C. Kremen personal observation). Several factors that could influence the relative yields have not been taken into account in any global assessment. First, organic management can produce higher yields than conventional management under extreme climate conditions such as drought or deluge (Lotter et al. 2003, Pimentel et al. 2005). Second, most primary studies did not utilize intercropping as an organic farming practice (e.g., <25% of the studies in Seufert et al. 2012). The reported organic to conventional yield losses could potentially be reduced or eliminated if organic farming systems utilized intercropping strategies (e.g., grain and legume or other combinations) that promote over-yielding (Vandermeer 1992, Snapp et al. 1998, Li et al. 2007). Third, an estimated 95% of organic agriculture uses crop varieties bred for conventional production systems (i.e., selective breeding in environments with synthetic fertilizers and pesticides). Yet, recent studies have shown that such varieties lack important traits (e.g., pest and disease resistance) to produce optimally under organic and/or low-input production conditions. Their use by organic producers may negatively affect nutrient use efficiency, tolerance for mechanical weed control, pest resistance and crop nutrition, thereby reducing crop yield in organic systems (Murphy et al. 2007, Lammerts van Bueren et al. 2011) and contributing to the reported organic to conventional yield gap. Local, regional, and global-scale quantitative comparisons that integrate these important factors are therefore needed to develop a more accurate assessment of the yield loss (or gain) effects of diversified farming systems. Importantly, future comparisons should assess the total human-edible calorie or net energy yield of the entire basket of crops produced over a complete rotation, rather than the yield ratios from single crops (Seufert et al. 2012), given that rotational and intercropping strategies are essential components of farming systems, especially diversified farming systems. In addition, there is a huge need for well-designed comparisons of yield between diversified farming systems and conventional systems that report both means and variances (L. Ponisio and C. Kremen personal observation).

Trade-offs between crop productivity and biodiversity conservation

If diversified farming systems are less productive in yield per area than conventional monoculture systems, the widespread adoption of such agriculture could require a larger land area to produce the same amount of food, potentially causing more habitat conversion and loss of biodiversity in order to feed the global population (Green et al. 2005, Phalan et al. 2011). The empirical evidence in favor of this “land-sparing” argument, however, is equivocal on two fronts: (1) that diversified farming systems reduce yields per area, or (2) that enhancing yields through industrialized agriculture results in the conservation of land for biodiversity. In addressing the first point, mean yield losses from a diversified farming system can be relatively small and might be reduced or eradicated by intercropping and through greater investment in research and development (see above). In addition, small farms are generally more productive in total output per hectare than larger farms, and this relationship is attributed in part to the diversified nature of smaller farms and their resource intensive use of land (reviewed in Rosset 1999). Further, as illustrated above, the use of appropriate diversified farming systems might increase, not decrease, yields for the substantial fraction of the global population in the developing world that currently practice low-input subsistence techniques (Pretty et al. 2006). Thus the use of diversified farming systems could potentially be a strategy for increasing production and local food security, particularly in biodiversity hotspot areas (Cincotta et al. 2000), which in turn could potentially reduce the need for habitat conversion and reduce attendant biodiversity loss (Phalan et al. 2011). In addressing the second point, a recent global analysis showed that increased yields per area do not consistently translate into reduced crop areas or reduced habitat conversion (Rudel et al. 2009, see also Perfecto and Vandermeer 2010). In contrast, high-yielding conventional monocultures are a known leading cause of forest conversion in several biodiversity hotspots, including the Brazilian Amazon (soy, Morton et al. 2006) and the rainforests of southeast Asia (oil palm, Wilcove and Koh 2010), representing a shift from earlier deforestation pressure from smallholders (Rudel 2007, DeFries et al. 2010). We conclude that broader adoption of diversified farming systems is not likely to provoke greater forest conversion than conventional monoculture agriculture, but that more complete quantitative comparisons of total output per area between diversified farming systems and conventional monoculture are critically needed in various crops, regions, and production systems around the world. 

CONCLUSIONS

Increased production is often cited as the main requirement for feeding a growing, changing world (Godfray et al. 2010), even though there is increasing consensus that it is problems of distribution and access that are responsible for the 1 billion hungry people today (IAAKSTD 2009). Production is also the primary goal of many growers working under small profit margins. In many industrialized systems, food production clearly trades off against other ecosystem services produced on agricultural lands (Foley et al. 2005), and is responsible for many negative environmental costs (Pimentel 2009, Gomiero et al. 2011a) and social costs (Villarejo 2003, Marks et al. 2010, Pimentel 2010). Indeed, while food production has greatly increased over the past 50 years under the industrialized model of the Green Revolution, most regulating and supporting ecosystem services have correspondingly declined (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2005, Raudsepp-Hearne et al. 2010). 

Our review suggests that it is possible to design many diversified farming systems that are equally productive and that maintain or enhance the provisioning of ecosystem services and thus agroecosystem resilience and sustainability. We found substantial evidence to support significant advantages of biologically diversified farming systems for biodiversity conservation, control of arthropod pests, weeds and diseases, pollination services, soil quality maintenance, energy-use efficiency and reduction of global-warming potential, resistance and resilience of farming systems to extreme weather events, and enhanced carbon sequestration and water-holding capacity in surface soils (see also Gomiero et al. 2011b). Additionally, diversified farming systems have been able to outperform conventional farming systems across a wide range of key ecological services despite receiving a small fraction of the research and development dollars allocated to conventional agriculture (Lipson 1997, Sooby 2001, Vanloqueren 2009). Nonetheless, much work remains to be done; in particular, integrated whole-system studies of the influence of different farming practices on multiple ecosystem components and services are critically needed in order to design optimal farming systems for specific regions, and to reduce yield gaps (Badgley et al. 2007, de Ponti et al. 2012, Seufert et al. 2012), when they exist, between diversified farming systems and conventional cropping systems. 

Although some diversified farming systems may not currently be as productive per hectare as chemically based conventional agriculture (de Ponti et al. 2012), we note that lower productivity can be balanced by enhanced environmental benefits and reduced externalities of diversified farming systems. In addition, there are many other important mechanisms for ensuring the human food supply that do not require enhancing crop productivity per area—for example, reducing food wastage (currently at 40%), changing consumption patterns towards a vegetarian diet, reducing biofuels production, and regulating commodity speculation, among others (Crews and Peoples 2004, Foley et al. 2011, Food and Agriculture Organization 2011). Further, we argue that with significantly increased investment in research and development, the scientific and agricultural communities would realize both greater ecological performance and food production from diversified farming systems. Choosing to invest in diversified farming systems, as opposed to continued investment in biotechnology and other reductionist strategies, is the right choice for developing sustainable farming systems and livelihoods. 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to two anonymous reviewers, and to Tim Crews, Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer, Alastair Iles, Matthew Luskin, Celine Pallud, and members of the Diversified Farming Systems Working Group at University of California Berkeley, for comments on the manuscript. The Berkeley Institute of the Environment and the Neckowitz Family Foundation provided support for the series of Diversified Farming Systems Roundtables that led to this paper.

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농민이 농지에 인공 질소비료를 뿌리고 있다. 

최근 Nation 기사에서, 아름다운 Elizabeth Royte 씨는 수압 분쇄 또는 프랙킹과 식량 공급 사이의 직접적인 관계에 대해 캐냈다. 요컨대, 화학물질을 섞은 액체로 암반을 파괴하여 천연가스를 추출하는 것은 오염된 물을 남긴다 —그리고 오염된 물이 우리가 먹는 작물과 가축에 들어갈 수 있다. 

그러나 식량/프랙킹의 관계에는 우리가 알던 것 말고 다른 사실도 있음이 최근에 알려졌다. 미국 농업은 인공 질소비료에 지나치게 의존하고, 질소비료는 천연가스를 연료로 하는 가공을 통해 합성된다. 미국의 천연가스 공급이 프랙킹을 통해 더욱더 공급되면, 농민들이 사용하는 질소비료도 프랙킹을 통한 천연가스에서 더욱더 생성될 것이다. 만약 대형 농업이 화학비료의 수요를 충족시키고자 값싼 프랙킹 가스에 매혹된다면, 화석연료 산업은 프랙킹 사업에 대한 규제를 깔아뭉개고 반대측과 맞설 강력한 동맹을 얻을 것이다. 

프랙킹한 질소비료(N으로 알려진)의 성장에 대한 잠재력은 엄청나다. 2000년대 기존의 미국 천연가스의 공급원이 고갈되어 가격이 치솟을 때, 미국의 화학비료 산업은 주로 트리니다드토바고처럼 기존의 천연가스가 여전히 상대적으로 풍부한 해외로 나가 채취했다. (이에 대해 2010년  Grist의 기사를 참조) 2009년 미국 농무부 문서의 아래 도표는 2000년대 국내의 질소비료 생산이 얼마나 빨리 변화했는지 보여준다. 



질소비료의 시대: 2000년대 질소비료 생산이 미국의 천연가스 가격의 상승으로 해외로 이전됐다. Source: USDA



한편, 프랙킹 붐은 미국의 천연가스를 갑자기 풍부하게 만들었다 —그리고 가격을 끌어내렸다. 현재 미국 천연가스의 비티유(Btu) New York Times에서 최근 보고했듯이, 2008년보다 75% 이하의 비용이 든다. 한편, 질소비료의 가격은 높은 작물 가격으로 강한 수요가 꾸준하여 높은 수준으로 유지되고 있다. 그러한 상황 —낮은 투입재 가격에 최종 생산품에 대한 높은 가격이 더해지는— 은  미국 시장에서 호황을 누리는 값비싼 질소비료를 생산하기 위해 값싼 미국의 천연가스를 활용하는 기업의 잠재적 노다지 광맥을 의미한다. 오늘날, 베네수엘라 해안 저편에 위치한 미국의 주요 질소 수입원인 섬나라 트리니다드토바고는 2000년대 초반의 미국과 같은 상황에 놓여 있다: 기존에 쉽게 채굴하던 천연가스의 공급이 다하고 있다. 2012년, 국제통화기금(IMF)는 현재의 채굴속도로는 그 국가에서 2019년까지만 채굴할 수 있을 것이라고 추산했다.

Kay McDonald가 다음 글(http://blog.daum.net/stonehinge/8727580)에서 표현했듯이 별로 놀랍지 않은데, 산업이 프랙킹 붐의 이득을 취하러 미국으로 되돌아오기 시작하고 있다. McDonald는 천연가스 수송관에 인접한 아이오와주에서 이집트 회사인 Orascom이 14억 달러의 새로운 대형 질소비료공장 건설사업을 9월에 발표한 사실을 지적했다. Wall Street Journal 따르면, "값싼 미국의 천연가스 공급과 세계의 가장 중요한 식량 공급자라는 국가의 역할"이 미국 시장으로 이집트의 거인을 끌어들였다.


그리고 난 뒤 미국의 화학비료 거인 CF Industries는 11월에 루이지애나와 아이오와에 있는 기존의 질소비료공장의 확장사업에 38억 달러를 투자한다고 발표했다. MarketWatch "낮은 천연가스 비용과 높은 곡물 가격의 이득을 취하기 위한" 움직임이라고 보고했다. 같은 달, 미국 소유의 농산업 기업인 CHS는 노스다코다에 질소비료 공장을 세우기 위해 12억 달러를 투자하겠다고 발표했다. Associated Press의 기사는 그러한 사업에서 잠재적 이윤을 맛본다고 했다: "천연가스 가격이 현재 28세제곱미터에 약 2.50달러이다. 그러한 가격에서, 1톤에 약 800달러에 팔리고 있는 암모니아 1톤을 만들기 위해 약 82달러의 천연가스가 든다."

현재, 이러한 투자를 이끌고 있는 초과 이윤에 대한 약속이 없다는 데에 주의해야 한다. 에너지 가격은 매우 유동적이고, 그 산업은 미래의 이익에 대한 희망에 수십 억을 내놓는 것에 수반되는 위험에 조심해야 한다. 납세자로 들어가자: 이러한 사업은 국가, 주, 지자체 차원에서 공공자금으로 서명되고 있다. 아이오와 공장의 확장에 대한 보상으로, CF Industries은 주 정부로부터 7000만 달러 이상의 세제혜택 받았고, Woodbury County로부터 공장 건물에 대하여 20년에 걸쳐 1억 6100만 달러의 재산세를 감면받았다고 Sioux City Journal 보고한다. 루이지애나 역시 기업의 확장에 대해 몇 백만 달러의 세금을 깎아줄 것이다.

Orascom이 건설하는 아이오와의 공장 같은 경우  주 정부의 경제적 재해복구를 돕기로 한 연방정부의 대출프로그램을 통하여 자금지원을 받고 있다 —아이오와의 2008년 홍수. Orascom에게 민간 시장보다 훨씬 낮은 이율을 허락한 대출프로그램은 사실상 보조금이다 —그 기업이 건설에 대한 이자 지급에서 3억 6000만 달러를 절약할 것 같다고 Des Moines Register는 보고했다. 그리고 아이오와주가 그 사업에 허용한 세금감면액은 최고 1억 달러이다.

납세자들은 이러한 사탕과 교환하여 무엇을 얻고 있는가? 내가 볼 때, 별로 없다. 공업형 농업의 인공 질소비료에 대한 지나친 의존이 일련의 환경오염 문제를 일으킨다: 과다한 질소가 하천으로 흘러가고 결국 미시시피강으로 흘러들어 바다 생물을 파괴하는 엄청난 적조의 먹이가 된다; 이산화탄소보다 300배 강력한 온실가스인 아산화질소를 배출한다; 그리고 토양의 유기물을 파괴한다.


그들이 프랙킹의 확산과 그에 대한 강한 규제에 압력을 가하듯이, 우려하는 시민들은 대형 석유회사만큼 강력하고 돈이 많은 경쟁자에게 의지할 수 있다: 대형 농업. 벌써 근본적으로 대형 농업 회사의 로비스트로 활동하는 미국농업협회(Farm Bureau Federation)는 논란의 여지가 있는 에너지원을 지지한다: "농업협회는 수압 분쇄의 사용을 포함하여 석유와 천연가스의 탐사와 생산에 대한 추가적인 방법을 지지한다"고 2012년 10월 정책성명에서 선언했다. 그러나 농업협회와 그 농산업 동맹들은 프랙킹 규제에 대한 싸움에서는 많은 역할을 하지 않고 있다. 비료산업이 값싼 미국의 천연가스에 의존하게 됨으로써, 상황이 변할 듯하다. 보조금을 받는 새로운 대규모 사업으로 질소의 사용을 지지하기보다, 공공정책은 질소가 덜 필요한 농법을 촉진하는 길을 모색할 수 있다. 한 가지 분명한 전략은 다양화이다. 가장 많이 심는 미국의 작물인 옥수수는 다른 작물보다 질소를 많이 필요로 한다. 아이오와 주립대학 Leopold Center의 연구자들이 작성한 2012년의 논문은 전형적인 중서부의 옥수수-콩 작부체계에 질소를 고정시키는 덮개작물에 더하여 "작은 곡물(귀리나 밀 등)"을 추가하여 확장함으로써, 농민들이 질소 수요를 80% 이상 줄일 수 있음을 보여주었다(이에 대해서는 다음을 참고하라 http://blog.daum.net/stonehinge/8726899) (또한 국내에서도 논에서 보리를 재배해 갈아엎는 것으로 수확량이 오른다는 연구결과도 있다 http://blog.daum.net/stonehinge/8725911). 그러한 변화를 촉진하는 정책들에 투자하는 것이 장기적으로 프랙킹 가스에 의존하는 쪽으로 나아가는 화학비료산업에 보조금을 지급하는 것보다 훨씬 현명한 일일 것이다. 



diversifying-corn-soybean-rotations.pdf

출처 http://goo.gl/758Aj

diversifying-corn-soybean-rotations.pdf
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http://www.agriculturesnetwork.org/resources/pdfs/learning-agricultures-module-3-full


Module 3 describes different aspects of small-scale cropping systems, with particular attention to mixed cropping practices. It describes recent advances in the development of crop biotechnologies, such as genetic engineering and formal seed systems, which have had a tremendous impact on cropping practices around the world. How can small-scale farmers maintain their diversity-based cropping systems what with the opportunities and limitations these kinds of changes bring up?

This module provides some insights into how small-scale cropping systems can be intensified in ways that take on an ecosystems approach, such as that of Integrated pest management (or IPM). It also looks beyond farmers' practices by analysing governance issues that affect small-scale farmers around the world. Issues discussed include intellectual property rights over plant varieties, and the importance of including small-scale farmers in land-use planning and setting priorities in the development of plant genetic resources.

Throughout the module, links are made to a variety of educational resources, including games and exercises, articles, videos, photos and ideas for field visits, in order to stimulate discussions and reflection on cropping systems in small-scale farming.

learning-module3-preview.pdf
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인도 북부 펀잡 지역에서는 5억 명이 해마다 쌀과 밀을 먹고 산다. 그곳에선 농지에 남은 볏짚에 불을 지르는 전통농업의 농법이 있다. 그를 통해 이산화탄소 등이 배출되는 문제를 생각할 수 있다. 세계의 농업이 온실가스 배출에 30% 정도 기여하는 것으로 알려져 있는데 더 지속가능한 방향으로 나아가야 하지 않을까? 그런데 어떻게? 아래 사진들을 보면서 그 대안을 고민해보자.




11월의 펀잡 지역, 농민들은 밀이나 채소의 씨앗을 심는다; 먼저, 농지를 정리하기 위해 불을 지른다. 이 사진은 동에서 서로 250km 이상 수천 곳에서 불을 지르고 있는 모습이다. 연기가 퍼져 위성의 카메라를 가리고 있다. 




펀잡의 Sangrur 근처에 사는 벼농사 농민이 자신의 수확물을 살펴본다. 이 지역에선 해마다 벼를 생산한 뒤 곧바로 밀 농사를 지어 약 5억 명이 먹고 산다.  펀잡 지역은 인도의 전체 농지 가운데 단지 약 1.6%를 차지할 뿐인데, 비옥한 흙과 발전된 농업 덕분에 인도에서 생산되는 밀의 약 1/5을 생산한다. 




농민은 벼를 수확하는 데 2주일 정도 걸리는데, 벼를 수확하고 밑둥이 한국보다 길게 남는다. 거기에 밀을 심는 것이다. 거기에 불을 질러 작물을 먹는 해충을 죽이고 볏짚이 거름으로 전환된다. 하지만 그때 발생하는 연기가 심혈관이나 호흡기 질환을 일으킬 수 있다.




수확하고 남은 볏짚을 불태울 준비를 하는 농민. 해마다 펀잡 지역에선 약 100만 헥타르의 볏짚이 2주일에 걸쳐 불타오른다.




값싸고 효과적으로 농지를 정리하는 방법이지만 –1헥타르를 재로 만드는 데 10분이 안 걸림– 12메가 톤의 이산화탄소와 기타 온실가스가 발생한다.




연기에는 이산화탄소만이 아니라 농약잔류물에 의한 독성 화학물질이 포함되어 있다. 그것이 토양비옥도를 감소시키는 원인이 되고 장기적으로 펀잡 지역의 벼-밀 돌려짓기 작부체계의 지속가능성을 위협하고 있다. 




대안은 있다: 행복한 파종기(Happy Seeder)로 알려진 이 트랙터가 끄는 파종기는 벼 밑둥을 베어서 덮개로 만드는 동시에 밀을 심는다. 그러나 주 정부에서 보조금정책을 펴고 있지만 대부분의 농민들에게는 기계값이 너무 비싸다.




손으로 수확해 탈곡하는 것과 같은 저차원적 기술 대안도 도움이 될 수 있다. 손으로 수확하면 볏짚을 최대한 길게 베어 농지에 밑둥을 거의 남기지 않기에 태울 필요도 없어진다. 그러나 탈곡한 뒤에 볏짚이 많이 남고, 그래서 몇몇 사업에서는 펀잡 지역에서 발생하는 이러한 볏짚을 수거하여 바이오매스의 에너지원으로 전기를 생산하거나 가축의 먹이로 활용하고 있다.




볏짚을 활용할 별다른 대안이 없는 사람은 여전히 그걸 태워버린다.





뉴델리의 인디아 게이트가 볏짚을 태우는 연기와 매연과 안개로 뒤덮였다.




http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/gallery/2012/dec/07/farming-sustainable-india-in-pictures?CMP=twt_gu#/?picture=400653863&index=9

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