
Ecoagriculture
352 pages
6 x 9
352 pages
6 x 9
Future Harvest, Jeffrey A. McNeely, and Sara J. Scherr
Although food-production systems for the world's rural poor typically have had devastating effects on the planet's wealth of genes, species, and ecosystems, that need not be the case in the future. In Ecoagriculture, two of the world's leading experts on conservation and development examine the idea that agricultural landscapes can be designed more creatively to take the needs of human populations into account while also protecting, or even enhancing, biodiversity. They present a thorough overview of the innovative concept of "ecoagriculture" - the management of landscapes for both the production of food and the conservation of wild biodiversity. The book:
Ecoagriculture explores new approaches to agricultural production that complement natural environments, enhance ecosystem function, and improve rural livelihoods. It features a wealth of real-world case studies that demonstrate the applicability of the ideas discussed and how the principles can be applied, and is an important new work for policymakers, students, researchers, and anyone concerned with conserving biodiversity while sustaining human populations.
"...this book is an important contribution."
Ecology
List of Cases, Maps, Figures, Tables, and Boxes
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms
PART I. The Challenge: Agricultural Intensification, Rural Poverty, and Biodiversity
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Wild Biodiversity under Threat
Chapter 3. Agriculture and Human Welfare
Chapter 4. Agriculture and Wild Biodiversity
PART II. The Opportunity: Integrating Biodiversity Conservation in Agricultural Development
Chapter 5. Ecoagriculture: Genesis of the Approach
Chapter 6. Making Space for Wildlife in Agricultural
Chapter 7. Enhancing the Habitat Value of Productive
Chapter 8. Coexisting with Wild Biodiversity in Ecoagriculture Systems
PART III. Policy Responses
Chapter 9. Policies to Promote Ecoagriculture
Chapter 10. Market Incentives for Ecoagriculture
Chapter 11. Institutions to Support Ecoagriculture
Chapter 12. Bringing Ecoagriculture into the Mainstream
Glossary
References
About the Authors
Index