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Study links higher farm income, ecological gains

By Paul Welitzkin in New York | China Daily | Updated: 2019-04-19

Rubber has always been a key commodity in Hainan, China's southernmost province and an island known for its tropical climate, beach resorts and forested interior.

Hainan's rubber plantations have been expanding to supply material for tires in China's booming auto market, now the largest in the world. While providing jobs and income, the rubber production surge has also resulted in an extensive loss of the island's natural forest coverage, helping deplete a resource that helps in soil retention and flood mitigation. Rubber's ancillary effects also pose a danger to the island's coral reefs - a key tourist attraction.

A recent study, which pooled the work of researchers from Stanford University, Canada's McGill University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, showed that farmers and operators who took environmental concerns into account doubled their incomes while reducing their reliance on a single harvest.

It's an approach that also produced environmental benefits for the land and could help farmers worldwide protect not only the environment, but their livelihoods as well.

In 2010, Gretchen Daily, director of the Stanford Natural Capital Project and a professor at Stanford University, arrived in Hainan.

"At that time (Hainan), had experienced its worst flooding in 50 years," Daily said. "There were also problems with infrastructure like roads and the island's fishing industry. With that vulnerability in mind, we set out to see what could reverse the rapid deforestation that was happening on the island."

Rubber production on Hainan was an example of monoculture farming, the agricultural practice of producing or growing a single crop, which maximizes crop yield. "Twentieth-century monoculture farms greatly increased agricultural production, but at a huge price," she said.

Researchers looked at land use and land-cover changes in Hainan over a 19-year period of rubber plantation growth.

In particular, they looked at one key land management change: a technique called intercropping that involves cultivating other valuable plants in addition to a main crop.

Daily and the researchers came up with the idea of planting crops like areca nuts and other high-value products in the space between the rubber tree trunks on Hainan. "Adding in other crops besides rubber helped to diversify and improve farm income (many of the crops had a higher profit margin than rubber) and also reduced the environmental risks from converting the island's forests to produce rubber," Daily said.

Zheng Hua, of the Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, was the lead author in the study. Zheng said that initially many of the rubber farmers were reluctant to plant the new crops.

"The main reason why they were skeptical of implementing them is the market price changes. The market price of agricultural products (like rubber) is one of the main factors influencing rural household livelihoods. For example, the price of rubber in 2006 was 20 yuan ($3) per kilogram. However, in 2017, the price was about 8 yuan per kg," Zheng said.

Daily also said rubber farmers were concerned that the additional crops would take away nutrients from the soil and "diminish the productivity of the rubber trees".

Those fears proved to be unfounded, said Daily, as rubber production was equal to the yield before the additional crops were added. "Farmer income doubled because these were high-margin crops."

The environmental benefits include less sediment runoff, better flood control and a reduction in pollution runoff that was going into drinking water supplies, said Daily. All of this also reduced the stress on the coastal areas and the coral reefs to help the tourism industry on the island.