2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.agsy.2017.05.003
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Social and ecological analysis of commercial integrated crop livestock systems: Current knowledge and remaining uncertainty

Abstract: A B S T R A C TCrops and livestock play a synergistic role in global food production and farmer livelihoods. Increasingly, however, crops and livestock are produced in isolation, particularly in farms operating at the commercial scale. It has been suggested that re-integrating crop and livestock systems at the field and farm level could help reduce the pollution associated with modern agricultural production and increase yields. Despite this potential, there has been no systematic review to assess remaining kn… Show more

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Cited by 134 publications
(78 citation statements)
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“…However, integrating commercial crop and animal production involves tradeoffs at several scales. At the farm and regional scales, socio-economic motivators such as risk reduction and land-use efficiency on the one hand are balanced by high upfront capital costs and managerial complexity on the other (Garrett et al 2017). While these tradeoffs are relatively well understood, much less is known about the biophysical tradeoffs at the field scale, i.e., between ecosystem functions driving animal production and those driving crop production.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, integrating commercial crop and animal production involves tradeoffs at several scales. At the farm and regional scales, socio-economic motivators such as risk reduction and land-use efficiency on the one hand are balanced by high upfront capital costs and managerial complexity on the other (Garrett et al 2017). While these tradeoffs are relatively well understood, much less is known about the biophysical tradeoffs at the field scale, i.e., between ecosystem functions driving animal production and those driving crop production.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These outcomes remain unexplored for many types of crop and livestock integration because to date, most ICLS research has focused primarily on cattle (Garrett et al 2017b). Yet, opportunities to integrate other types of animals into cropping systems are numerous, including the integration of sheep into vineyard systems.…”
Section: Sheep Integrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Incorporating more crops into extensive animal production, which has the potential makes pastoral production more efficient, can increase output of plant-based goods like timber, beans, and cocoa. Production systems with both animals and crops are referred to as "integrated crop-livestock systems" (Garrett et al, 2017b). In other cases, farmers may benefit more by substituting animals entirely with crops.…”
Section: Conclusion and Suggestions For Sustainable Economic Transitmentioning
confidence: 99%