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Introduced crops supplement rather than replace indigenous crops in an African center of agrobiodiversity

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Abstract Crop diversity plays a major role in underpinning food security. It is especially important to smallholder and subsistence farmers, who often rely on crop diversity for stable and resilient production. Despite this, global expansion of a small pool of major crops and the associated homogenisation of global agricultural systems may decrease on-farm crop diversity. We surveyed 1,369 subsistence farms stratified across climate gradients in the Ethiopian Highlands, to characterise the richness and cultivated area of the 83 edible crops they contained. We further categorise these crops by their period of introduction to Ethiopia. We apply non-metric multidimensional scaling and mixed effects modelling to characterise agrisystem composition and test the impact of crop introductions. We find a significant positive relationship between introduced and indigenous crop richness, suggesting that crop introductions have tended to supplement rather than replace or reduce indigenous crop diversity. Geographically matched farms with higher proportions of introduced crops, had significantly higher overall crop richness. Analysis of socio-economic drivers indicates that both poverty and low accessibility are associated with reduced cultivation of modern introductions. We conclude that global patterns of major crop expansion do not necessarily result in agrobiodiversity loss for subsistence farmers, in our Ethiopian case study. Importantly, socioeconomic factors may strongly influence the farmers propensity to adopt novel species, suggesting targets for agricultural extension policies. Given the rapid climatic, economic and demographic changes impacting global food systems and the threats to food security these entail, robust indigenous agricultural systems supplemented with diverse introduced crops may enhance resilience.
Title: Introduced crops supplement rather than replace indigenous crops in an African center of agrobiodiversity
Description:
Abstract Crop diversity plays a major role in underpinning food security.
It is especially important to smallholder and subsistence farmers, who often rely on crop diversity for stable and resilient production.
Despite this, global expansion of a small pool of major crops and the associated homogenisation of global agricultural systems may decrease on-farm crop diversity.
We surveyed 1,369 subsistence farms stratified across climate gradients in the Ethiopian Highlands, to characterise the richness and cultivated area of the 83 edible crops they contained.
We further categorise these crops by their period of introduction to Ethiopia.
We apply non-metric multidimensional scaling and mixed effects modelling to characterise agrisystem composition and test the impact of crop introductions.
We find a significant positive relationship between introduced and indigenous crop richness, suggesting that crop introductions have tended to supplement rather than replace or reduce indigenous crop diversity.
Geographically matched farms with higher proportions of introduced crops, had significantly higher overall crop richness.
Analysis of socio-economic drivers indicates that both poverty and low accessibility are associated with reduced cultivation of modern introductions.
We conclude that global patterns of major crop expansion do not necessarily result in agrobiodiversity loss for subsistence farmers, in our Ethiopian case study.
Importantly, socioeconomic factors may strongly influence the farmers propensity to adopt novel species, suggesting targets for agricultural extension policies.
Given the rapid climatic, economic and demographic changes impacting global food systems and the threats to food security these entail, robust indigenous agricultural systems supplemented with diverse introduced crops may enhance resilience.

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