Coffee cultivation good for diversity in agrarian settlements but not in forests
Coffee shrubs, both in themselves and because they are most often cultivated in the shade of large trees, can have a positive impact on plant and animal diversity in those parts of the landscape that are deforested and dominated by agriculture. What constitutes a dilemma for consumers wishing to shop ecologically is that when coffee is grown in a forest, which is also common, the impact on diversity is negative. This is shown by researchers at the Department of Botany, Stockholm University, in Sweden, who recently published two articles about the role of coffee cultivation in conserving plants and animals in Ethiopia, the original home of coffee.
Coffee is one of the most important trading commodities, consumed by people around the world. Each year seven million tons of coffee is produced in 50 countries. Coffee originally grew in Ethiopia, where it still grows wild in the ever-shrinking forested areas that remain.
Researchers Kristoffer Hylander and Aaron Gove at the Department of Botany, Stockholm University, working with colleagues in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia, recently published new findings about the role of coffee for the preservation of biodiversity in Ethiopia in two of the world's leading journals for conservation biology, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment and Conservation Letters, based on a research project funded by SIDA, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.
One of the studies shows that coffee shrubs cultivated in gardens under individual large shade trees can be home to a great diversity of forest plants. It is shown for the first time that the coffee bush itself is an important substrate for mosses and flowering plants.
"Coffee cultivation entails not only that growers preserve and nurture large trees in the cultivated landscape but also that coffee shrubs themselves house a diversity of plants. Coffee cultivation in an agricultural landscape is thus a positive force for conserving biological diversity from a landscape perspective," says Kristoffer Hylander.
The same conclusion regarding the role of coffee in the cultivation landscape is also drawn in the other study, which deals with the distribution of birds and above all forest birds in the landscape. But, besides growing coffee under shade trees in a cultivated landscape, growers also harvest coffee from forests in the regions under study.
"In some places they harvest sparse growth of rather low-producing forest coffee, while in other places they thin out the forest and replace all other wild shrubs and small trees with coffee. In contradistinction to the positive role of coffee as a creator of living environments in the open cultivated landscape, our research shows that the higher the density of coffee in the forest, the fewer species of forest birds can be found there," says Kristoffer Hylander.
One might wonder whether the aggregate impact of coffee production is positive or negative for conserving wild plants and animals in the Ethiopian landscape. Will increased interest in coffee be good for plant and animal diversity in Ethiopia by increasing the density of trees or will it impoverish the forest ecosystem through a gradual shift from forests to coffee plantations with shade trees? Kristoffer Hylander is continuing his research on ecosystems in southwestern Ethiopia with an eye to understanding the impact of coffee systems on plant and animal diversity and the role of coffee in deforestation and forest conservation.
Source: Swedish Research Council
Related
- Shade coffee benefits more than birdsMon, 22 Dec 2008, 12:43:37 EST
- Another reason to drink a nice cup of shade-grown joeMon, 22 Dec 2008, 12:43:44 EST
- Diversity of trees in Ecuador's Amazon rainforest defies simple explanationThu, 23 Oct 2008, 16:22:36 EDT
- New study finds that growers do not reap benefits of rising food pricesThu, 19 Jun 2008, 16:29:00 EDT
- Shade trees can protect coffee cropsWed, 1 Oct 2008, 9:29:05 EDT
Other sources
- Coffee cultivation good for diversity in agrarian settlements but not in forestsfrom Science CentricFri, 20 Feb 2009, 8:50:04 EST
- Drink Coffee, Improve Plant And Animal Diversityfrom Scientific BloggingFri, 20 Feb 2009, 0:49:12 EST
- Coffee cultivation good for diversity in agrarian settlements but not in forestsfrom PhysorgThu, 19 Feb 2009, 11:49:21 EST
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Learn more about
Popular science news articles
- Study shows flavanol antioxidant content of US chocolate and cocoa-containing products
- Biology, training and profit sharing make best traders
- Tobacco smoke exposure before heart transplantation may increase the risk of transplant failure
- New data emerges on liver transplant survival rates
- New computer cluster gets its grunt from games
- Beyond sunlight: Explorers census 17,650 ocean species between edge of darkness and black abyss
- Generating electricity from air flow
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money
- Beyond genomics, biologists and engineers decode the next frontier
- It's a gas: New discovery may lead to heartier, high-yielding plants
No popular news yet
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money
- Full recovery now possible for an 'untreatable' mental illness
- Beyond sunlight: Explorers census 17,650 ocean species between edge of darkness and black abyss
- Is global warming unstoppable?
- Polyphenols and polyunsaturated fatty acids boost the birth of new neurons
- New evidence that dark chocolate helps ease emotional stress
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- Scientists discover influenza's Achilles heel: Antioxidants
- Nanoparticles used in common household items caused genetic damage in mice
- New study links vitamin D deficiency to cardiovascular disease and death