Sustainability
Agronomic sustainability is an important interface for linking global environmental issues with local farmer concerns.
To this end, ASB has developed a set of plot-level criteria and indicators to evaluate the sustainability of a range of land use systems which can follow forest conversion, including measurements of soil structure, nutrient balance, and crop protection.
ASB-Sustainable Land Use Mosaics (SLUM) has built on this plot-level assessment of environmental and agronomic parameters to incorporate landscapes as a unit of analysis in its local, national, regional and global activities. By addressing the hydrological, ecological and other environmental services at the landscape scale, ASB scientists work to fill the landscape-level gap in terms of impacts on local people, priorities of key policymakers and potential complementarities with global environmental concerns.
ASB leading scientist of Sustainable Land Use Mosaics is Dr. Stephan Weise
See the Proceedings of the International Conference: Bringing the Landscape into focus: Developing a Conceptual Framework and Identifying Methods for ASB Work at the Landscape Scale, 12-14 November 2001 Chiang Mai, Thailand.