Ecosystem services and small-holder farming practices -between payments, development support and right- an integrated approach (ILMI Working paper 10)
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Date
2018-08
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Namibia University of Science and Technology, Integrated Land Management Institute
Abstract
Small-scale	farmers	in	north-central	Namibia	face	numerous	challenges,	ranging	from	low	crop	yields,	high	rainfall	variability	and	land	degradation	which	is	threatening	the	long-term	productivity	of	the	land,	to	social	changes	that	are	reducing	the	work	force	available	for	farming.	This	paper	aims	to	assess	existing	land	use	practices	(LUPs)	and	to	determine	their	relationship	to	ecosystem	services	(ES).	As	agriculture	(crop	and	livestock	farming)	is	the	dominant	land	use	in	northern	Namibia,	it	is	the	main	driver	influencing	environmental	services	and	will	be	in	the	focus	here.	We	suggest	ways	of	combining	an	improvement	of	provisioning	services	(especially	food	production	and	thus	livelihoods	of	small-scale	farmers)	together	with	regulating	services	(e.g.	climate	regulation	through	carbon	storage	and	soil	fertility	conservation)	to	create	multiple	benefits	at	the	landscape	level.	In	addition	to	identifying	suitable	LUPs,	we	argue	that	any	activity	trying	to	improve	ES	should	count	on	the	already	existing	initiatives	and	interventions	and	look	for	synergies	and	complementarities.
Description
Keywords
agriculture, aid, biodiversity, carbon sequestration, ecosystem services, environment, farming, food security, land use practices, north-central Namibia
Citation
Bloemertz, L., Naanda, M., Wingate, V., Angombe, S., & Kuhn, N. (2018). Ecosystem services and small-holder farming practices -between payments, development support and right- an integrated approach (ILMI Working paper 10). Windhoek, Namibia: Namibia University of Science and Technology.