What would it look like? Visualizing a future US Corn Belt landscape with more table food production

IF 2 3区 农林科学 Q2 AGRICULTURE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems Pub Date : 2024-02-19 DOI:10.1017/s1742170524000024
Tiffanie F. Stone, Janette R. Thompson, Emily Zimmerman, Tassia M. Brighenti, Matt Liebman
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Abstract

Most farmland in the US Corn Belt is used to grow row crops at large scales (e.g., corn, soybean) that are highly processed before entering the human food stream rather than specialty crops grown in smaller areas and meant for direct human consumption (table food). Bolstering local table food production close to urban populations in this region through peri-urban agriculture (PUA) could enhance sustainability and resilience. Understanding factors influencing PUA producers' preferences and willingness to produce table food would enable supportive planning and policy efforts. This study combined land use visualization and survey data to examine the potential for increased local table food production for the US Corn Belt. We developed a spatial visualization of current agricultural land use and a future scenario with increased table food production designed to meet 50% of dietary requirements for a metropolitan population in 2050. A survey was administered to row crop (1360) and specialty crop (55) producers near Des Moines, Iowa, US to understand current and intended agricultural land use and factors influencing production. Responses from 316 row crop and 25 specialty crop producers were eligible for this analysis. A future scenario with increased table food production would require less than 3% of available agricultural land and some additional producers (approximately 130, primarily for grain production). Survey responses indicated PUA producers planned small increases in table food production in the next three to five years. Producer plans, including land rental for table food production, could provide approximately 25% of residents' fruit, vegetables, and grains, an increase from the baseline of 2%. Row crop producers ranked food safety regulations, and specialty producers ranked labor concerns as strong influences on their decision-making. Both groups indicated that crop insurance and processing facilities were also important. Increasing table food production by clustering mid-scale operations to increase economies of scale and strengthening supply chains and production infrastructure could provide new profitable opportunities for farmers and more resilient food systems for growing urban regions in the US Corn Belt. Continuing to address producer factors and landscape-scale environmental impacts will be critical in considering food system sustainability challenges holistically.
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它会是什么样子?可视化未来美国玉米带景观,增加餐桌食品生产
美国玉米带的大部分农田都用来种植大面积的连作作物(如玉米、大豆),这些作物在进入人类食物流之前都经过了高度加工,而不是在较小的区域内种植供人类直接食用的特种作物(餐桌食品)。通过城郊农业(PUA)加强该地区靠近城市人口的当地餐桌食品生产,可以提高可持续性和抗灾能力。了解影响城郊农业生产者生产餐桌食品的偏好和意愿的因素,将有助于制定支持性规划和政策。本研究将土地利用可视化与调查数据相结合,研究美国玉米带增加当地餐桌食品生产的潜力。我们开发了当前农业用地使用的空间可视化,以及未来增加餐桌食品生产的情景,旨在满足 2050 年大都市人口 50%的饮食需求。我们对美国爱荷华州得梅因附近的行作物生产者(1360 人)和特种作物生产者(55 人)进行了调查,以了解当前和未来的农业用地使用情况以及影响生产的因素。有 316 位连作作物生产者和 25 位特种作物生产者的回复符合本分析的要求。未来增加餐桌食品生产将需要不到 3% 的可用农业用地和一些额外的生产者(约 130 个,主要用于谷物生产)。调查结果显示,PUA 生产者计划在未来三到五年内小幅增加餐桌食品生产。生产者计划,包括租地用于餐桌食品生产,可为居民提供约 25% 的水果、蔬菜和谷物,比 2% 的基准线有所增加。行作物生产者将食品安全法规列为影响其决策的主要因素,而专业生产者则将劳动力问题列为影响其决策的主要因素。这两个群体都表示,作物保险和加工设施也很重要。通过集聚中等规模经营来提高规模经济效益,并加强供应链和生产基础设施,从而增加餐桌食品生产,可为农民提供新的盈利机会,并为美国玉米带不断增长的城市地区提供更具弹性的食品系统。在全面考虑粮食系统可持续性挑战时,继续解决生产者因素和景观尺度环境影响问题至关重要。
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来源期刊
Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems
Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems 农林科学-农业综合
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
7.40%
发文量
39
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems (formerly American Journal of Alternative Agriculture) is a multi-disciplinary journal which focuses on the science that underpins economically, environmentally, and socially sustainable approaches to agriculture and food production. The journal publishes original research and review articles on the economic, ecological, and environmental impacts of agriculture; the effective use of renewable resources and biodiversity in agro-ecosystems; and the technological and sociological implications of sustainable food systems. It also contains a discussion forum, which presents lively discussions on new and provocative topics.
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