Minimum‐data analysis of ecosystem service supply in semi‐subsistence agricultural systems |
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Authors: | John M. Antle Bocar Diagana Jetse J. Stoorvogel Roberto O. Valdivia |
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Affiliation: | John Antle (email: ) is professor, Agricultural and Resource Economics, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA. Bocar Diagana is a Policy Economist, IFDC, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. Jetse Stoorvogel is Associate Professor, Land Dynamics Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands. Roberto Valdivia is Research Associate, Agricultural Economics and Economics, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA. |
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Abstract: | Antle and Valdivia (2006, Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics 50, 1–15) proposed a minimum‐data (MD) approach to simulate ecosystem service supply curves that can be implemented using readily available secondary data and validated the approach in a case study of soil carbon sequestration in a monoculture wheat system. However, many applications of the MD approach are in developing countries where semi‐subsistence systems with multiple production activities are being used and data availability is limited. This paper discusses how MD analysis can be applied to more complex production systems such as semi‐subsistence systems with multiple production activities and presents validation analysis for studies of soil carbon sequestration in semi‐subsistence farming systems in Kenya and Senegal. Results from these two studies confirm that ecosystem service supply curves based on the MD approach are close approximations to the curves derived from highly detailed data and models and are therefore sufficiently accurate and robust to be used to support policy decision making. |
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Keywords: | ecosystem services Kenya minimum data model semi‐subsistence agriculture Senegal |
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