TY - JOUR
T1 - Socioeconomic determinants of crop diversity and its effect on farmer income in guangxi, Southern China
AU - Li, Cheng
AU - Chen, Xinjian
AU - Jiang, Aiwu
AU - Lee, Myung Bok
AU - Mammides, Christos
AU - Goodale, Eben
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the authors.
PY - 2021/4
Y1 - 2021/4
N2 - Encouraging crop diversity could be a “win-win” for farmers and biodiversity conservation, if having a variety of crops produces the heterogeneity that supports biodiversity, and if multiple crops decrease the risk of farmers to losses due to pests, climatic events or market fluctuations, without strongly reducing their incomes. However, data on the factors that influence the decision to plant multiple crops, and how that affects profit, are needed, especially for East Asia, where these questions have been little studied. We distributed a questionnaire on these issues to 301 farmers in 35 villages in an agricultural area close to the city of Nanning in Guangxi, south China. Crop diversity increased with land size and closeness to the city. We detected no relationship between profit variability and crop diversity, but farmers with greater crop diversity and more land were more profitable, a result driven by several rarely planted but lucrative types of crops. Crop diversity can be a focus for policy to improve farmers’ livelihoods; these policies need to encourage farmers with little land to form cooperatives. Further research is needed to understand the effect of crop diversity on profit variability, and in areas closer to protected areas where biodiversity is higher.
AB - Encouraging crop diversity could be a “win-win” for farmers and biodiversity conservation, if having a variety of crops produces the heterogeneity that supports biodiversity, and if multiple crops decrease the risk of farmers to losses due to pests, climatic events or market fluctuations, without strongly reducing their incomes. However, data on the factors that influence the decision to plant multiple crops, and how that affects profit, are needed, especially for East Asia, where these questions have been little studied. We distributed a questionnaire on these issues to 301 farmers in 35 villages in an agricultural area close to the city of Nanning in Guangxi, south China. Crop diversity increased with land size and closeness to the city. We detected no relationship between profit variability and crop diversity, but farmers with greater crop diversity and more land were more profitable, a result driven by several rarely planted but lucrative types of crops. Crop diversity can be a focus for policy to improve farmers’ livelihoods; these policies need to encourage farmers with little land to form cooperatives. Further research is needed to understand the effect of crop diversity on profit variability, and in areas closer to protected areas where biodiversity is higher.
KW - Agricultural economics
KW - Agroecosystems
KW - Crop heterogeneity
KW - Environmentally friendly agriculture
KW - Land-sharing vs. land-sparing
KW - Questionnaire
KW - Rice farming
KW - Risk aversion
KW - Small-holder agriculture
KW - Sustainable agriculture
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85104835675&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/agriculture11040336
DO - 10.3390/agriculture11040336
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85104835675
SN - 2077-0472
VL - 11
JO - Agriculture (Switzerland)
JF - Agriculture (Switzerland)
IS - 4
M1 - 336
ER -