Universidad de Costa Rica
  • Sobre Kérwá
  • Acceso Abierto
  • Cómo Depositar
  • Políticas
  • Contacto
    • español
    • English
  • English 
    • español
    • English
  • Login
View Item 
  •   Kérwá Home
  • Investigación
  • Ciencias sociales
  • Geografía
  • View Item
  •   Kérwá Home
  • Investigación
  • Ciencias sociales
  • Geografía
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Interactions between geomorphology and production chain of 2 high-quality coffee in Costa Rica

artículo científico
Thumbnail
View/Open
sustainability-1641586_corr2.pdf (1.253Mb)
Date
2022-04
Author
Quesada Román, Adolfo
Quirós Arias, Lilliam
Zamora Pereira, Juan Carlos
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
High-altitude coffee has an international reputation due to its high quality, especially in countries with a long production history like Costa Rica. Specific geographical characteristics determine the regions where high-altitude coffee can be cultivated. Over the last two decades, new production conditions have promoted the growth of smallholder coffee farms in the Upper Buenavista Catchment (UBC) in the South of Costa Rica. To understand this phenomenon's process, we ini-tially performed a detailed geomorphological mapping of the high-elevation production sites in the UBC. Then, we used remote sensing to determine the coffee land cover (2005, 2012, and 2018) to compare their landforms. Furthermore, we analyzed the production-processing-market chain that has promoted coffee plantations since 2005. Our results show that coffee farmers chose more unstable and erosive areas with short-term production prospects to cultivate premium-prices coffee. Moreover, farmers have changed their role in the coffee sector, evolving from small pro-ducers to entrepreneurs with specialized knowledge. These actions may reduce economic risks and improve the household incomes of smallholder coffee producers. However, limited research has been done along the tropics about the relationships between landforms, socioeconomic drivers, and high-altitude coffee yield. Therefore, our results are essential to present geomor-phology and applied geography as baselines in land use planning for agricultural landscapes.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10669/86491
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/sustainability
Collections
  • Geografía [116]



  • Repositorios universitarios

  • Repositorio del SIBDI-UCR
  • Biblioteca Digital del CIICLA
  • Repositorio Documental Rafael Obregón Loría (CIHAC)
  • Biblioteca Digital Carlos Melendez (CIHAC)
  • Repositorio de Fotografías
  • Colección de videos de UPA-VAS
  • Sitios recomendados

  • Buscador regional de LA Referencia
  • Buscador del Open ROAR
  • Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO)
  • Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)
  • Redalyc
  • Redes sociales

  • facebook.com/repositoriokerwa
  • @Ciencia_UCR
  • Sobre Kérwá
  • Acceso Abierto
  • Cómo depositar
  • Políticas
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Costa Rica. Algunos derechos reservados. Este repositorio funciona con DSpace.
 

 

Browse

All of KérwáCommunities & CollectionsTitlesAuthorsSubjectsProcedenceTypeThis CollectionTitlesAuthorsSubjectsProcedenceType

My Account

LoginRegister

  • Repositorios universitarios

  • Repositorio del SIBDI-UCR
  • Biblioteca Digital del CIICLA
  • Repositorio Documental Rafael Obregón Loría (CIHAC)
  • Biblioteca Digital Carlos Melendez (CIHAC)
  • Repositorio de Fotografías
  • Colección de videos de UPA-VAS
  • Sitios recomendados

  • Buscador regional de LA Referencia
  • Buscador del Open ROAR
  • Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO)
  • Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)
  • Redalyc
  • Redes sociales

  • facebook.com/repositoriokerwa
  • @Ciencia_UCR
  • Sobre Kérwá
  • Acceso Abierto
  • Cómo depositar
  • Políticas
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Costa Rica. Algunos derechos reservados. Este repositorio funciona con DSpace.