The authors, including researchers from The Nature Conservancy, said the study underlines a need for more farmer-to-farmer knowledge sharing to help dispel myths and increase the use of agroecological practices.
“When you look around the world at how agroecology is operationalized, and how it really thrives, it’s often based on a social component which is underdeveloped in the U.S.,” said first author Jeff Liebert, Ph.D. ’22, now at the University of British Columbia. “Agroecology is really about context-specific, place-based solutions, and there are a lot of opportunities to help develop local, farmer-led movements and to find ways to support farmers connecting with one another.”
The authors write that the eight practices included in the survey – the use of compost, reduced tillage, intercropping of different plants, flower strips, crop rotations, cover cropping and border plantings – generally do require more complex management, although researchers have found the practices can pay for themselves through increased productivity. The interventions also support biodiversity, and can improve water and air quality, and lower emissions and susceptibility to flooding and drought.
“There’s robust scientific evidence that these practices can build resilience for farms to climate impacts,” said Bezner Kerr, who said she was even more convinced of this after serving on the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. “I think that’s an important message – that it’s beneficial as a society that we have these practices incorporated, but it’s also beneficial to the farm and their stable income and ability to maintain production.”
The researchers found that adoption of the practices lagged particularly on large farms, which control the vast majority of farmland in the U.S.; farmers of larger operations reported more intense and often systemic labor challenges, including scarcity of farm workers and greater pressure from state-specific minimum wage increases. They were also more likely to pursue mechanization.
“There’s a bigger question here about the type of world we’re moving towards and the types of potential solutions we’re willing to grapple with,” Liebert said. “If we replace humans with machines, it forecloses the potential pathway to farm work that’s really meaningful and dignified.”
Source : cornell.edu