Abstract
Agroforestry and livestock-keeping both have the potential to promote anthropogenic climate changeresilience,
and understanding how they can support each other in this context is crucial. Here, we
discuss relevant issues in East Africa, where recent agroforestry interventions to support livestockkeeping
have included the planting of mostly-exotic tree-fodders, and where most parts of the region
are expected to become drier in the next decades, although smaller areas may become wetter. Wider
cultivation and improved management of fodder trees provides adaptation and mitigation
opportunities in the region, but these are generally not well quantified and there are clear
opportunities for increasing productivity and resilience through diversification, genetic improvement,
improved farm-input delivery and better modelling of future scenarios. We relate, and illustrate with
the example of current- and future-climate tree species distribution modelling, important areas for
future research.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
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Udgivelsessted | Nairobi, Kenya |
Udgiver | World Agroforestry Centre |
Udgave | ICRAF Working Paper No 178 |
Sider | 1-22 |
Antal sider | 22 |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - 2014 |