Northeastern research sheds light on low crop yields and their impact on small farms

By Alena Kuzub August 23, 2024

Northeastern University professor Gabriela Garcia studies the relationship between people and plants.

And it’s an often misunderstood relationship.

She’s especially interested in how decisions are made by farmers on small farms, which often operate on shoestring budgets with limited resources.

Why is she interested?

Because, Garcia says, more than 80% of the world’s farms are small, operating on one to five acres. So the global food supply depends on them.

But, she says, outside the United States, most small farms don’t have agricultural insurance that protects them during low-yield years when revenues can drop by 70%.

“There’s all sorts of uncertainty,” Garcia says.

One phenomenon that contributes to low yields and has been largely overlooked, Garcia says, is something called “alternate bearing” — a pattern of fruit and nut trees producing high yields one year, followed by years of low yields.

Read more from Northeastern Global News

Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

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