Journal article

Biodiverse coffee plantations provide co-benefits without compromising yield

DR Wright, A Gordon, RE Bennett, MJ Selinske, PE Lentini, GE Garrard, AD Rodewald, SA Bekessy

Journal of Sustainable Agriculture and Environment | WILEY | Published : 2024

Abstract

Introduction: Coffee is a ubiquitous global commodity that is cultivated with a wide range of practices, each with different, yet poorly understood trade-offs between management intensity, yield, and biodiversity. For example, monocultures prioritise coffee production, but do not necessarily deliver the highest coffee yields, nor the greatest profits. Understanding these trade-offs is key to informing sustainable coffee production. Methods: We synthesized the literature on these relationships, finding that agroforestry farming systems support greater biodiversity while often producing coffee yields that are comparable to monoculture systems. Results: Over half of studies (57%) failed to dete..

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Grants

Awarded by RMIT University


Funding Acknowledgements

Dale Wright acknowledges the support of an Australian Research Council Linkage Project Grant LP190100453 entitled Effective biodiversity behaviour change across supply chains. Ayesha Tulloch, Casey Visintin, and Nita Lauren are thanked for their comments on the research. Open access publishing facilitated by RMIT University, as part of the Wiley - RMIT University agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.