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Home Gardens Sustain Crop Diversity and Improve Farm Resilience in Candelaria Loxicha,Oaxaca, Mexico
Authors:Mariel Aguilar-Støen  Stein R Moe  Sara Lucia Camargo-Ricalde
Institution:1.Centre for Development and the Environment,University of Oslo,Blindern,Oslo,Norway;2.Department of Ecology and Natural Resource Management,Norwegian University of Life Sciences,?s,Norway;3.Departamento de Biologia,Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Iztapalapa,Mexico DF,Mexico
Abstract:Home gardens are land use units embedded in a larger land use system, in this case in Candelaria Loxicha, Oaxaca, Mexico. Using a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods, we investigated how home gardens are integrated into local farming practices and how these influence biodiversity. Our findings suggest that home gardens harbour high levels of biodiversity, which are maintained and enriched by farmers’ practices, particularly plant and seed exchange. Plant diversity is higher in younger home gardens and in home gardens where owners actively exchange plant material with other people. Through plant exchange, seed storage, and the dispersion of seeds and plants in different land uses, farmers encourage plant diversity and consequently increase the resilience of their farming system in changing climatic, demographic and economic conditions. Both men and women participate in the establishment, care and management of home gardens, but they are responsible for different plants and home garden functions. For economic reasons, the inhabitants of Candelaria Loxicha are increasingly engaging in international migration. Migrants, upon their return bring new ideas and plants that might transform the rural landscape.
Keywords:Home gardens  Socioecological systems  Farmers’  experimentation  Farmers’  knowledge  Agrobiodiversity
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