TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of plant diversity on income generated by agroforestry systems in Talamanca, Costa Rica
AU - Salazar-Díaz, Ricardo
AU - Tixier, Philippe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
PY - 2019/4/15
Y1 - 2019/4/15
N2 - Optimal use of resources in agroforestry requires the evaluation of multi-species and multi-strata cropping systems. The current study evaluated the effect of plant diversity on the performance of agroforestry systems in Talamanca, Costa Rica. Plants in nine 100-m 2 plots in each of 20 fields were classified into five groups (banana, cacao, other fruits, timber, and firewood), and diversity was assessed by the Shannon–Wiener index. The production of each individual plant was estimated and converted into income according to local market prices. Our results indicated that as plant diversity increased, the income derived per plant increased for other fruits, firewood, and timber and also when all cultivated plants were considered as one group. In contrast, the income derived per plant decreased for banana and cacao as diversity increased. This suggests that complementarity between plants was stronger than competition for those plants occupying the higher strata of the canopy (i.e., other fruits, firewood, and timber) but that competition was stronger than complementarity for plants occupying the lower strata of the canopy (i.e., banana and cacao). These results increase our understanding of how the composition and the organisation of these agroforestry systems may be optimized.
AB - Optimal use of resources in agroforestry requires the evaluation of multi-species and multi-strata cropping systems. The current study evaluated the effect of plant diversity on the performance of agroforestry systems in Talamanca, Costa Rica. Plants in nine 100-m 2 plots in each of 20 fields were classified into five groups (banana, cacao, other fruits, timber, and firewood), and diversity was assessed by the Shannon–Wiener index. The production of each individual plant was estimated and converted into income according to local market prices. Our results indicated that as plant diversity increased, the income derived per plant increased for other fruits, firewood, and timber and also when all cultivated plants were considered as one group. In contrast, the income derived per plant decreased for banana and cacao as diversity increased. This suggests that complementarity between plants was stronger than competition for those plants occupying the higher strata of the canopy (i.e., other fruits, firewood, and timber) but that competition was stronger than complementarity for plants occupying the lower strata of the canopy (i.e., banana and cacao). These results increase our understanding of how the composition and the organisation of these agroforestry systems may be optimized.
KW - Cacao
KW - Economic value
KW - Global evaluation
KW - Multi-strata agroforestry systems
KW - Musa
KW - Productivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85033464264&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10457-017-0151-0
DO - 10.1007/s10457-017-0151-0
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85033464264
SN - 0167-4366
VL - 93
SP - 571
EP - 580
JO - Agroforestry Systems
JF - Agroforestry Systems
IS - 2
ER -