
Agronomy for Sustainable Agriculture: A Review
E. Lichtfouse, M. Navarrete, P.
Debaeke, V. Souchère, C. Alberola and J. Ménassieu
Abstract
Sustainability rests on the principle that we must meet the needs of
the present without compromising the ability of future generations to
meet their own needs. Starving people in poor nations, obesity in rich
nations, increasing food prices, on-going climate changes, increasing
fuel and transportation costs, flaws of the global market, worldwide
pesticide pollution, pest adaptation and resistance, loss of soil fertility
and organic carbon, soil erosion, decreasing biodiversity, desertification,
and so on.
Despite unprecedented advances in sciences allowing us to visit planets
and disclose subatomic particles, serious terrestrial issues about food
show clearly that conventional agriculture is no longer suited to feeding
humans and preserving ecosystems. Sustainable agriculture is an alternative
for solving fundamental and applied issues related to food production
in an ecological way [Lal (2008) Agron. Sustain. Dev. 28, 57–64].
While conventional agriculture is driven almost solely by productivity
and profit, sustainable agriculture integrates biological, chemical,
physical, ecological, economic and social sciences in a comprehensive
way to develop new farming practices that are safe and do not degrade
our environment.
To address current agronomical issues and to promote worldwide discussions
and cooperation we implemented sharp changes at the journal Agronomy
for Sustainable Development from 2003 to 2006. Here we report (1) the
results of the renovation of the journal and (2) a short overview of
current concepts of agronomical research for sustainable agriculture.
Considered for a long time as a soft, side science, agronomy is rising
fast as a central science because current issues are about food, and
humans eat food.
This report is the introductory article of the book Sustainable Agriculture,
volume 1, published by EDP Sciences and Springer (Lichtfouse et al.,
2009).
Source
Agronomy for Sustainable Development 29, 1 (2009) 1-6
en français
Posted December 16, 2009