Farming with Alternative Pollinators Creates High Incentives for Farmers for Pollinator Friendly Agriculture
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Stefanie Christmann, Moulay Chrif Smaili, Abdellah Benbya, Toshpulat Rajabov, Athanasios Tsivelikas. (22/9/2017). Farming with Alternative Pollinators Creates High Incentives for Farmers for Pollinator Friendly Agriculture. Germany.
Abstract
Currently, environmental research on pollinator decline does not trigger broad protection
of pollinators in particular in agricultural landscapes. Prevailing environmental recommendations, e.g. seeding wildflower strips in and between fields, don’t take farmers’ interests
into account. Farmers prefer income from the entire area and they regard wildflowers as
weeds potentially spreading their seeds all over the field. Whereas the new agricultural
Farming with Alternative Pollinators (FAP) approach uses marketable plants for habitat
enhancement and avoids spread of weeds. FAP triggers farmers’ motivation to enhance
habitats in fields based on evidence of increased income. FAP measures the impact of enhanced habitats (25 % of the field) on the diversity of pollinators and predators and on the
total net income in comparison to control fields having the main crop on 100 % of the field.
Pilot projects in Uzbekistan with cucumber and sour cherry as main crops and in Morocco
with cucumber as main crop proved high increase of yields of the main crop and higher
income per surface based on higher diversity and abundance of pollinators and predators
in FAP-fields. In total income from FAP fields was more than double in comparison to
control. The incentive of large income gain makes FAP scalable. FAP obviates the need to
reward farmers for pollinator-friendly practices. As insect species highly differ in Central
Asia and North Africa the approach proved replicability. Trials on more crops are recommended. In case they demonstrate substantial income increases as well, FAP might have
high potential to protect pollinators and simultaneously enhance food security. Currently,
the increase of horticulture production is mainly based on increase of area, whereas FAP
increases the productivity per ha. Thus FAP might reduce the loss of forests and rangelands for establishment of additional fields and orchards. FAP is applicable also in low
income countries, which cannot afford subsidies as e.g. the European Union pays.
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Author(s) ORCID(s)
Christmann, Stefanie https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2303-2449
Tsivelikas, Athanasios https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6267-5079
Tsivelikas, Athanasios https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6267-5079