A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Unsiloed agroforestry research and policy: Livelihood and multifunction as chestnut (Castanea sativa) management priorities for Türkiye




AuthorsWall, Jeffrey; Okan, Taner; Köse, Coskun; Köse, Nesibe; Aksoy, Elif Basak

PublisherELSEVIER

Publishing placeAMSTERDAM

Publication year2025

JournalForest Policy and Economics

Journal name in sourceFOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS

Journal acronymFOREST POLICY ECON

Article number 103474

Volume173

Number of pages8

ISSN1389-9341

eISSN1872-7050

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103474

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103474

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/485216891


Abstract

In this study, we investigate variation in the priorities for the chestnut tree held by stakeholders across T & uuml;rkiye in order to highlight the importance of unsiloed research and policy in the study area and beyond. We designed our study to evaluate the operating hypothesis of state agencies who manage the tree in sharp regional contrast, with the western provinces managed overwhelmingly for horticulture, and the northern provinces for silviculture. We utilized ethnobiological methodologies of plant trait preference cataloguing and freelisting to engage and analyze the priorities for chestnut trees for 96 stakeholder households across T & uuml;rkiye 's chestnut suitable territory. We found that no household utilized the tree for one purpose only, that every household used the tree for both its fruits and its timber, and that the vast majority utilized the tree for nuts, timber and one other category of use. We explored the resulting data using saliency analysis, multiple correspondence analysis and geospatial visualization through inverse distance weighting. We found no significant effect of western or northern location on priorities. Our findings substantiate conservation and livelihood development theories which advocate for unsiloed, interdisciplinary research informed by stakeholders, and also showcase an application of agroforestry as a framework for directly amplifying the priorities of livelihood practitioners in the formulation of land use policy. Insights generated by this study support recommendations for T & uuml;rkiye and beyond, including more thoroughly interdisciplinary research to perpetuate multifunctional use of trees as well as more regional and unified governmental strategies for conservation and rural livelihood viability.


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Funding information in the publication
Jeffrey R Wall reports financial support was provided by TUBITAK. Jeffrey R Wall reports financial support was provided by Borlaug Food Security Fellowship. Jeffrey R Wall reports financial support was provided by Fulbright Commission of Turkey. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.


Last updated on 2025-26-03 at 15:42