Trade-offs associated with changing cropping patterns in semi-arid areas of Morocco

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

El-Fartassi, I., Milne, A. E., Oulaid, B., Bezrhoud, Y., Metcalfe, H., Alonso Chavez, V., Coleman, K., Diarra, A., Alami, R. E., Prout, J., Waine, T., Zawadzka, J. and Corstanje, R. 2025. Trade-offs associated with changing cropping patterns in semi-arid areas of Morocco . Science of the Total Environment. 979, p. 179492. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179492

AuthorsEl-Fartassi, I., Milne, A. E., Oulaid, B., Bezrhoud, Y., Metcalfe, H., Alonso Chavez, V., Coleman, K., Diarra, A., Alami, R. E., Prout, J., Waine, T., Zawadzka, J. and Corstanje, R.
Abstract

We developed a model-based framework to support land-use and management decision-making. This framework integrates data and models to support an assessment of scenarios related to crop choices and irrigation management. The framework includes the IPCC models to describe nutrient losses, the Rothamsted carbon model to predict soil organic carbon and Cornel's Environmental Impact Quotient model to predict impacts from pesticides (fungicides, herbicides and insecticides). We used Monte Carlo simulations to quantify model uncertainties. Shaded arrays were used to communicate the uncertainties to end users of the framework. We parameterised our framework to explore outcomes for an irrigated agricultural area in a semi-arid region of Morocco. We used the framework to explore scenarios that were codesigned with farming stakeholders. The scenarios related to crop diversification, and to recent policies on the expansion of olive cultivation and the adoption of efficient irrigation technologies. For the outcomes considered (production, profitability, soil carbon, nutrient losses, pesticide impacts), there were clear trade-offs associated with the cropping system choice. Compared to the baseline scenario of rotated crops, olive production led to greater carbon sequestration (average 4 % increase by doubling olive production), reduced water use (average 3 % reduction by doubling olive production), and reduced emissions (average 42 % reduction by doubling olive production) but was less profitable and provided fewer edible calories. Additionally, olive cultivation was associated with higher environmental impacts from pesticides. Diversified systems, while less profitable, were associated with less harmful pesticide use. Drip irrigation was associated with positive outcomes for profit (average 23 % increase), water use (average 13 % reduction in water use), and reduced nitrogen leaching (average 40 % reduction) with negligible changes in other metrics. However, we did not account for factors associated with increased groundwater depletion. We conclude that such frameworks are a useful means for policy-stakeholders to explore the outcomes of their decisions, thereby, helping to minimise unintended consequences.

KeywordsAgroecosystems modelling; Trade-offs; Irrigated crops; Communicating uncertainty; Pareto fronts; RothC
Year of Publication2025
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Journal citation979, p. 179492
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179492
Web address (URL)https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969725011295#gts0020
Open accessPublished as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
FunderOffice Chérifien des Phosphate (OCP)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Funder project or codeAgZero+
Growing Health (WP3) - bio-inspired solutions for healthier agroecosystems: Discovery landscapes
Growing Health [ISP]
Publisher's version
Accepted author manuscript
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
OnlineApr 2025
Publication process dates
Accepted18 Apr 2025
ISSN0048-9697
PublisherElsevier

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