1st Edition

Food Production and Nature Conservation Conflicts and Solutions

    368 Pages 35 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    368 Pages 35 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Feeding the world's growing human population is increasingly challenging, especially as more people adopt a western diet and lifestyle. Doing so without causing damage to nature poses an even greater challenge. This book argues that in order to create a sustainable food supply whilst conserving nature, agriculture and nature must be reconnected and approached together.

    The authors demonstrate that while the links between nature and food production have, to some extent, already been recognized, until now the focus has been to protect one from the impacts of the other. Instead, it is argued that nature and agriculture can, and should, work together and ultimately benefit from one another. Chapters describe efforts to protect nature through globally connected protected area systems and illustrate how farming methods are being shaped to protect nature within agricultural systems. The authors also point to many ways in which nature benefits agriculture through the ecosystem services it provides.

    Overall, the book shows that nature conservation and food production must be considered as equally important components of future solutions to meet the global demand for food in a manner that is sustainable for both the human population and the planet as a whole.

    Part 1: Food is Disconnected from Nature

    1. Introduction – Food Production and Nature Conservation: Conflicts and Solutions

    Iain J. Gordon, Geoff R. Squire and Herbert H.T. Prins

    Part 2: The Future Challenge for Food Security and Nature Conservation

    2. Feeding the Eleven Billion within the Sustainable Development Goals Framework

    Munir A. Hanjra, Andrew Noble, Simon Langan and Jonathan Lautze

    3: Limits to Crop Production

    Geoff R. Squire

    Part 3: Approaches to Protecting Nature and Producing More Food

    4. Can a Nature Reserve Help Feed a Family? Protected Areas and Food Security

    Nigel Dudley and Sue Stolton

    5. Protected Areas, Ecosystem Services, and Food Production

    Jeffrey A. McNeely

    6. Agricultural Intensification and Diversity for Reconciling Production and Environment: The Role of Integrated Crop-Livestock Systems

    Gilles Lemaire, Julie Ryschawy, Paulo César de Faccio Carvalho and François Gastal

    7: A Landscape Approach to Integrating Food Production and Conservation

    Ivette Perfecto and John Vandermeer

    Part 4: A New Agenda for Food Production and Conservation

    8: New Technologies: Costs and Benefits for Food Production in Contrasting Agro-ecological Production Systems

    Michael J. Robertson, Nigel P. Preston and Graham D. Bonnett

    9: Utilising Genetic Diversity to Feed the World

    Nigel Maxted and Anne Lauvie

    10. How Should Land Be Used? Bioenergy and Responsible Innovation in Agricultural Systems

    Alison Mohr, Orla Shortall, Richard Helliwell and Sujatha Raman

    11. Innovative Pasture Cropping: An Ecological Approach to Farming

    Ndungi wa Mungai and Colin Seis

    12. Nature’s Role in Feeding the Ten Billion: How Biodiversity can Benefit Agriculture

    Rob Brooker

    Part 5: A Future Framework for Linking Food Production and Conservation

    13 Rebalancing Food Production and Nature Conservation: The Need for Design-oriented Research

    Walter A.H. Rossing, Rodolphe Sabatier, Félix Teillard, Jeroen C.J. Groot and Pablo Tittonell

    14. Markets to Support Sustainable Food Production: Potentials and Challenges of Alternative Provisioning

    Cristina Grasseni

    15. Global-Local Governance for Generating Transformative Pathways towards Sustainable Food Provisioning and Nature Conservation

    Rosemary Hill and Jessica Duncan

    Part 6: Food Production and Nature Conservation

    16: Conclusion: Re-engaging Agriculture with Nature

    Iain J. Gordon, Geoff R. Squire and Herbert H.T. Prins

    Biography

    Iain J. Gordon is Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the Division of Tropical Environments and Societies at James Cook University, Australia, and Emeritus Fellow of the James Hutton Institute, UK. 

    Herbert H. T. Prins is Professor in Resource Ecology at Wageningen University, The Netherlands. 

    Geoff R. Squire is Principal Research Scientist at the James Hutton Institute, UK.

    "This multi-author work aims to look across disciplines at the way food production, which for the most part in this book means farming, can be "reconnected to nature"... Many of the indidual chapters of this book are interestinig, informative and at times thought-provoking." - John Hopkins in The Bulletin of the British Ecological Society (March 2018).