Earth Observation based multi-scale analysis of crop diversity in the European Union: first insights for agro-environmental policies
Melissande Machefer, Matteo Zampieri, Marijn van der Velde, Frank, Dentener, Martin Claverie, Rapha\"el d'Andrimont

TL;DR
This study uses satellite data to analyze crop diversity across the EU at multiple scales, providing insights for policy and understanding agro-ecosystem resilience.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-scale analysis of crop diversity in the EU using high-resolution satellite data, offering new insights into spatial patterns and policy implications.
Findings
Crop diversity varies significantly across EU countries.
Higher crop diversity is associated with smaller farms.
Diversity levels differ across spatial scales and regions.
Abstract
To understand the resilience of farms and the agricultural sector, as well as the provision of ecosystem services, we need to characterize and quantify crop diversity. Using a 10m resolution satellite-derived product, we created datasets of crop diversity across spatial and administrative scales for 27 EU countries and the UK in 2018. We define local crop diversity, or -diversity, at a 1km scale, corresponding to large or clusters of small-to-medium-sized farms. crop diversities range from 2.3 to 4.4, with higher levels in systems with many small farms (averaging less than 10 ha). -diversity, the number and area of crops grown independently of location, increases from 2.85 at 1km to 3.86 at 10km, and levels off at 4.27 at 100km. These levels are higher than those reported in the U.S., possibly due to differences in farm structure and practices.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAgricultural Innovations and Practices · Land Use and Ecosystem Services · Agronomic Practices and Intercropping Systems
