Landscape diversity and the resilience of agricultural returns: a portfolio analysis of land-use patterns and economic returns from lowland agriculture
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In: Agriculture and Food Security, Vol. 2, No. 1, 2, 07.01.2013.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Landscape diversity and the resilience of agricultural returns
T2 - a portfolio analysis of land-use patterns and economic returns from lowland agriculture
AU - Abson, David
AU - Fraser, Evan
AU - Benton, Tim
N1 - Funding Information: DJA was supported by an ESRC/NERC Interdisciplinary Award. We thank the two reviewers, whose comments greatly improved the manuscript. Publisher Copyright: © 2013 Abson et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
PY - 2013/1/7
Y1 - 2013/1/7
N2 - Background: Conventional agriculture is increasingly based on highly specialized, highly productive farms. It has been suggested that 1) this specialization leads to farms that lack resilience to changing market and environmental conditions; and 2) that by decreasing agricultural diversity, the resilience of the farming system also decreases. Methods: We used agricultural gross margin (GM) forecasts from 1966 to 2010 and remote sensing data from agricultural landscapes in the lowland UK, in conjunction with modern portfolio theory, to test the hypothesis that decreasing land-use diversity results in landscapes that provide higher, but more volatile, economic returns. We considered the role of spatial scale on the expected levels of volatility and resilience of agricultural returns. Results: We found that: 1) there was a strong linear trade-off between expected GMs and the expected volatility of those GMs in real lowland agricultural landscapes in the UK; 2) land-use diversification was negatively correlated with expected GMs from agriculture, and positively correlated with decreasing expected volatility in GMs; 3) the resilience of agricultural returns was positively correlated with the diversity of agricultural land use, and the resilience of agricultural returns rose quickly with increased land-holding size at small spatial extents, but this effect diminished after landholdings reached 12,000 hectares. Conclusions: Land-use diversity may have an important role in ensuring resilient agricultural returns in the face of uncertain market and environmental conditions, and land-holding size plays a pivotal role in determining the relationships between resilience and returns at a landscape scale. Creating finer-grained land-use patterns based on pre-existing local land uses may increase the resilience of individual farms, while maintaining aggregate yield across landscapes.
AB - Background: Conventional agriculture is increasingly based on highly specialized, highly productive farms. It has been suggested that 1) this specialization leads to farms that lack resilience to changing market and environmental conditions; and 2) that by decreasing agricultural diversity, the resilience of the farming system also decreases. Methods: We used agricultural gross margin (GM) forecasts from 1966 to 2010 and remote sensing data from agricultural landscapes in the lowland UK, in conjunction with modern portfolio theory, to test the hypothesis that decreasing land-use diversity results in landscapes that provide higher, but more volatile, economic returns. We considered the role of spatial scale on the expected levels of volatility and resilience of agricultural returns. Results: We found that: 1) there was a strong linear trade-off between expected GMs and the expected volatility of those GMs in real lowland agricultural landscapes in the UK; 2) land-use diversification was negatively correlated with expected GMs from agriculture, and positively correlated with decreasing expected volatility in GMs; 3) the resilience of agricultural returns was positively correlated with the diversity of agricultural land use, and the resilience of agricultural returns rose quickly with increased land-holding size at small spatial extents, but this effect diminished after landholdings reached 12,000 hectares. Conclusions: Land-use diversity may have an important role in ensuring resilient agricultural returns in the face of uncertain market and environmental conditions, and land-holding size plays a pivotal role in determining the relationships between resilience and returns at a landscape scale. Creating finer-grained land-use patterns based on pre-existing local land uses may increase the resilience of individual farms, while maintaining aggregate yield across landscapes.
KW - Environmental planning
KW - Economics
KW - Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics
KW - Agro-diversity index
KW - Agro-ecology
KW - Land use
KW - Landscape heterogeneity
KW - Resilience
KW - Specialization
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85006056971&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/03259d56-1db5-3360-b74a-2d2b82423701/
U2 - 10.1186/2048-7010-2-2
DO - 10.1186/2048-7010-2-2
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 2
JO - Agriculture and Food Security
JF - Agriculture and Food Security
SN - 2048-7010
IS - 1
M1 - 2
ER -