Diversification practices reduce organic to conventional yield gap
University of California, Berkeley · Florida State University
Abstract
Agriculture today places great strains on biodiversity, soils, water and the atmosphere, and these strains will be exacerbated if current trends in population growth, meat and energy consumption, and food waste continue. Thus, farming systems that are both highly productive and minimize environmental harms are critically needed. How organic agriculture may contribute to world food production has been subject to vigorous debate over the past decade. Here, we revisit this topic comparing organic and conventional yields with a new meta-dataset three times larger than previously used (115 studies containing more than 1000 observations) and a new hierarchical analytical framework that can better account for the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 219.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 141
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Agroecology
- Yield gap
- Organic farming
- Diversification (marketing strategy)
- Agricultural diversification
- Agriculture
- Cropping
- Yield (engineering)