Farmscape Composition and Livelihood Sustainability in Deforested Landscapes of Colombian Amazonia
Título
Farmscape Composition and Livelihood Sustainability in Deforested Landscapes of Colombian Amazonia
Autor
Augusto Castro-Nunez, Lisset Pérez Marulanda, Patrick Lavelle, Martin Rudbeck Jepsen, Wendy Francesconi, Karen Camilo, Martha Vanegas-Cubillos, Miguel Antonio Romero, Juan Carlos Suárez, Antonio Solarte, Marcela Quintero
Descripción
In this article, we operationalized a sustainability framing based on the Sustainable Rural Livelihood Resources Framework (SLF), which consists of five capitals—human, physical, social, financial, and natural. We proposed a sustainability index (SI) for two landscapes dominated by two agricultural systems: cattle ranching and small-scale family agriculture. Farm variables within each capital were analyzed using confirmatory factor analysis. Key variables were identified and index values were calculated for each capital. These were combined through a set of simultaneous equations to estimate farm-specific capitals and SI from the observed farm variables. Principal component and cluster analyses were used to group the farms according to their index scores and to further compare their characteristics. Furthermore, with the purpose of comparing the index scoring with an independent metric, a landscape indicator, which comes from a continuous forest, was calculated. From the results, the capitals that contributed to a higher SI score the most were financial and physical. As cattle ranching was associated with higher economic returns and infrastructure investments, this livelihood was identified as the most sustainable. Yet, cattle ranching has been a deforestation driver in the region. These results are attributed to the current conceptual framework design, which gives greater weight to material and economic variables; therefore, it generates a weak sustainability measure. Although the framework allowed us to identify land-use alternatives that could improve SI scores (i.e., silvopastoral systems), corrections to the proposed framework and methodological approach will need to include additional environmental benefits currently unaccounted for. Farmers that use their farms for conservation purposes should be recognized and compensated. An improved environmentally focused SI operational framework could help to endorse and promote sustainable livelihoods and to generate a strong sustainability measure.
Fecha
2020
Materia
confirmatory factor analysis, farmscape, silvopastoral system, sustainability, sustainable land use
Identificador
10.3390/agriculture10120588
Fuente
Agriculture
Editor
Sciendo
Cobertura
Agriculture (General)
Colección
Citación
Augusto Castro-Nunez, Lisset Pérez Marulanda, Patrick Lavelle, Martin Rudbeck Jepsen, Wendy Francesconi, Karen Camilo, Martha Vanegas-Cubillos, Miguel Antonio Romero, Juan Carlos Suárez, Antonio Solarte, Marcela Quintero, “Farmscape Composition and Livelihood Sustainability in Deforested Landscapes of Colombian Amazonia,” SOCICT Open, consulta 20 de abril de 2026, https://socictopen.socict.org/items/show/18716.
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