Content area

Abstract

Agroecosystems are facing a global challenge amidst a socioecological transition that places them in a dilemma between increasing land-use intensity to meet the growing demand of food, feed, fibres and fuels, while avoiding the loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. We applied an intermediate disturbance-complexity approach to the land-use changes of a Latin American biocultural landscape (Cauca river valley, Colombia, 1943–2010), which accounts for the joint behaviour of human appropriation of photosynthetic capacity used as a measure of disturbance, and a selection of land metrics that account for landscape ecological functionality. We also delved deeper into local land-use changes in order to identify the main socioeconomic drivers and ruling agencies at stake. The results show that traditional organic mixed-farming tended to disappear as a result of sugarcane intensification. The analysis confirms the intermediate disturbance-complexity hypothesis by showing a nonlinear relationship, where the highest level of landscape complexity (heterogeneity–connectivity) is attained when disturbance peaks at 50–60%. The study proves the usefulness of transferring the concept of intermediate disturbance to biocultural landscapes and suggests that conservation of heterogeneous and well-connected mixed-farming, with a positive interplay between intermediate level of disturbances and land-use complexity endowed with a rich intercultural heritage, will preserve a wildlife-friendly agro-ecological matrix likely to house high biodiversity and ecosystem services.

Details

Title
Socioecological transition in the Cauca river valley, Colombia (1943–2010): towards an energy–landscape integrated analysis
Author
Marull, Joan 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Delgadillo, Olga 2 ; Cattaneo, Claudio 1 ; La Rota, María José 3 ; Krausmann, Fridolin 4 

 Barcelona Institute of Regional and Metropolitan Studies, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain 
 Department of Civil and Industrial Engineering, Engineering Faculty, Pontifical Javeriana University, Cali, Colombia 
 Intercultural Studies Institute, Pontifical Javeriana University, Cali, Colombia 
 Institute of Social Ecology, Faculty for Interdisciplinary Studies, Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt, Vienna, Austria 
Pages
1073-1087
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Apr 2018
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
14363798
e-ISSN
1436378X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2022070224
Copyright
Regional Environmental Change is a copyright of Springer, (2017). All Rights Reserved.