Response of Coffee Farms to Hurricane Maria: Resistance and Resilience from an Extreme Climatic Event Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • AbstractResistance and resilience have become important concepts in the evaluation of disturbance events, providing a framework that is useful in light of the expected increase in frequency and occurrences of hurricanes as a consequence of climate change. Hurricane Maria landed on Puerto Rico as a category 4 storm in September of 2017. Among the affected elements were agricultural systems, including coffee agroecosystems. Historically, coffee has been a major backbone of the island’s agricultural sector. Grown with a range of management styles, the coffee agroecosystem provides an excellent model system to study the resistance/resilience of agroecosystems faced with hurricane disturbance. Sampling 28 farms and comparing pre-hurricane data (2013) with post hurricane data we find that management style had only a small effect on either resistance or resilience, likely due to the especially strong nature of the storm. Rather, the socio-political context of individual farms seems to be a more useful predictor of resilience.

authors

  • Lugo Pérez, Javier
  • Perfecto, Ivette
  • Hajian-Forooshani, Zachary
  • Iverson, Aaron
  • Irizarry, Amarilys D.
  • Lugo-Perez, Javier
  • Medina, Nicholas
  • Vaidya, Chatura
  • White, Alexa
  • Vandermeer, John

publication date

  • 2019

start page

  • 15668

volume

  • 9

issue

  • 1