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International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability

International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability 2 (2005) 154–166


Adaptation of Agroforestry Systems in South-Eastern Mexico through Integration of Farmer and Bioeconomic Evaluations

Jeremy Haggar1, Mauricio Sosa1, Blanca Díaz2, Gonzalo Hernández3, José Angel Contreras4 and Carlos Uc5
1ICRAF-México, Chetumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 2ICRAF-México and OEPFZM, Felipe Carrillo Puerto, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 3C.E: Sangri Serrrano, INIFAP, Escarcega, Campeche, Mexico, 4C.E: San Felipe Bacalar, INIFAP, Bacalar, Quintana Roo, Mexico and 5ICRAF-México and CRASX, Zoh Laguna, Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico


Abstract

Agroforestry systems have been promoted as sustainable land-use systems for regions where shifting agriculture is the traditional predominant land-use. Although environmentally sustainable, agroforestry systems require investment to establish that may affect their economic sustainability. In the southern Yucatan Peninsula 47 agroforestry plots of two timber and 10 fruit tree species were established with 22 farmers in three communities covering two rainfall zones and five soil types. Some fruit trees had wide adaptability to different soil, rainfall and management conditions, e.g. Manilkara zapota; others were restricted to the best soil, rainfall management conditions, e.g. Persea americana. The Meliaceae timber trees responded little to rainfall and soil, but stem borer attack was markedly lower in less intensively managed systems. Level of system maintenance greatly affected costs, but also opportunities for intercropping and obtaining immediate income. All levels of managements had negative net present value (NPV) for the three-year establishment phase, but so does traditional maize production. Farmers preferred to inter-crop their agroforestry systems, but were often limited by site quality. Determining sustainable agroforestry options for farmers requires multiple decisions related to species adaptability to the site, farmer production objectives and farmer capacity to invest in different management strategies. One production technology did not fit all.

Keywords: Cedrela odorata, fruit trees, Hypsipyla grandela, intercropping, net present value, Swietenia macrophylla

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Print ISSN 1473-5903
Online ISSN 1747-762X