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Expanded
Bibliography
Here are some more coffee-related articles and
books. These are in
addition to those cited in Jennifer McLean's
paper,
Merging Ecological and Social
Criteria for
Agriculture: the Case of Coffee.
Many of the works
cited here are annotated, and the annotator's
initials are given at the end
of the entry. (Brief biographies of the
annotators are available through
the "Coffee
Resource People"
page.)
If you come across a resource that should be listed here,
please
submit an annotated bibliographic entry for it to
David Gorsline
(DLG). We hope these coffee
sources
will be useful to you. The works are found in the
following
categories:
Monographs
- Dicum, Gregory and Luttinger, Nina 1999. The Coffee Book. New Press.
Provides a
good treatment of the economics of the international coffee trade, and
one chapter each on the environmental and social issues involved in the
coffee business. (Full disclosure: they used our co-op, Equal Exchange,
as an example of how fair trade begins to address some of the structural
inequities of the industry). (Entry added 22 April 2001. Annotated by Rodney North, Equal Exchange.)
- Kricher, John 1997. A Neotropical Companion. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Kricher's subject is the ecosystems of the
tropical Western Hemisphere -- not just rain forests but
also dry forests, the Brazilian woodland called
cerrado, and coastal systems like mangroves -- and
the creatures that live there.
There are 177 small color
photographs, several devoted to agriculture and coffee.
(Entry added 23 April 2001.
Annotated by DLG)
- Pendergrast, Mark 1999. Uncommon Grounds: The History of
Coffee and
How It Transformed Our World. New York: Basic Books.
Pendergrast
covers everything you might want to know about
coffee: the development
of this Ethiopian shrub, its spread in
tropical regions and acceptance
in Europe and North America, the
growth of 19th and 20th century coffee
mega-companies,
inter-American political intrigue, the rise of the
current coffee
craze, and then someall the intimate details of
process,
market, and how intertwined this plant is with our north/south
hemispheric relations, examining the impact of coffee in Brazil,
Colombia, Central America, Mexico and elsewhere. (Annotated
by PJB)
- Rice, Paul D. and Jennifer
McLean 1999. Sustainable Coffee at the Crossroads. Washington, DC:
Consumer's Choice Council.
This is an important evaluation of the
various sustainable coffee initiatives and sealsshade-grown, fair
trade, and organic. It assesses the dividing lines in the debate, the
potential for common standards,and makes some thoughtful conclusions and
qualified recommendations.
You can find a copy of the report at http://www.consumerscouncil.org. (Annotated by PJB)
- Williams, Robert G. 1994. States and Social Evolution: Coffee and the Rise of National
Governments in Central America. Univ. of North Carolina Press.
Provides a great historical introduction to how societies,
power structures and governments unfolded in distinct way in various
central american countries (including Guatemala and Costa Rica and
Nicaragua). (Entry added 22 April 2001. Annotated by Rodney North, Equal Exchange.)
Overviews and popular treatments
- Gorsline,
David L. 2000. Coffee Talk.
Birding 32(1): 66-68.
This is a short, but helpful glossary of coffee
terms. While designed for
birders with an interest in shade-grown coffee,
it is useful for others as well.
(Entry added 18 March
2000. Annotated by PJB)
- Hull, Jennifer Bingham 1999. Can Coffee
Drinkers Save the Rain Forest? The Atlantic Monthly 284(Aug, No. 2):
19-21.
The author accompanies a buyers' trip to Finca Santa Isabel,
Guatemala, one of the first farms
to earn ECO-O.K. certification. US-AID's
recent efforts to promote shade-grown and organic coffee are noted. The
article cites SCAA's Ted Lingle and Sanctuary Coffee's Fred Houk that
technification
was in part a means to improve the yield of arabica, in the
face of pressure to blend more low-quality robusta into mass-market
brands. Lingle says, "Technification was a response to the industry focus
on quantity, not quality."(Entry added 18 March 2000.
Annotated by DLG)
- Sherry, Thomas W. 2000. Shade Coffee: A Good Brew Even in Small Doses. The Auk 117(3): 563-568.
Presents an overview of recent field research. Offers three reasons why shade coffee research
is important: shade coffee plantations are disappearing rapidly; coffee plantations comprise much of the tropical landscape; and coffee plantations provide ecosystem services, including pest control and contributions to soil fertility.
(Entry added 23 April 2001.
Annotated by DLG)
- Wille, Chris 1994. The Birds and the Beans. Audubon (Nov-Dec):
58-64.
One of the earliest popular articles to sound the alert about
coffee agriculture's
effect on bird habitat. Focusses on Guatemala,
and on the research of Russell Greenberg and
Jay Vannini. A sidebar
shows that awareness among roasters has increased since then: at the time
(1994), Nestlé stated, "We have no relationship with the coffee
growers," and Starbucks was skeptical that buyers would pay a shade-grown
premium. Excellent photographs of shade- and sun-grown coffee farms. (Entry added 18 March 2000. Annotated by DLG)
Towards "sustainable"
coffee
- Conservation Action Network (CAN). Principles
of the Conservation Agriculture Network. New York: CAN Secretariat,
Rainforest Alliance.
- ECO-OK 1998. Normas generales de
produccion agricola con los criterios para cafe.
Proposed national
program. (Annotated by JM)
- McLean,
Jennifer 2000. The Status of Shade Coffee. Birding 32(1): 61-65.
The
article's subtitle reads as follows: "the market grows, the
debates
continue, and wider issues emerge." That covers this article's
main
issues -- it is short, topical, and useful. (Entry
added 18 March 2000. Annotated by PJB)
- PROMECAFE 1995. Antecedentes, conclusiones y recomendaciones.
En seminario regional de consulta sobre caficultura sostenible. Boletin
PROMECAFE 66/67. Guatemala.
Relationship of shade and taste
- Astua,
G., G. J. Aguilar 1997. Prueba comparativa de las
cualidades
organolepticas de la bebida del Catimor T5175, var
Costa Rica 95,
Caturra y Catuai en ocho regiones cafetaleras de
Costa Rica. In:
Memorias del 18vo Simposio Latinoamericano de
Caficultura, Septiembre
1997, San Jose.
- Muschler, R. G. 1998. Shade improves quality of
Coffea
arabica L. in a sub-optimal coffee zone of Costa Rica. In
press.
Relationship of shade and
production
- Aldazabal, M. and O. Alarcon 1994. Fisiologia
del cafeto en
condiciones de montana. III. Influencia del soly y la
sombra en el
crecimiento del fruto. Centro Agricola Cuba 21(3):
5-9.
- Muschler, R. G. 1997. Effectos de sombra de Erythrina
poeppigiana sobre Coffea arabica vars. Caturra y
Catimor. In:
Memorias del 18vo Simposio Latinoamericano de
Caficultura, San Jose,
Costa Rica, Septiembre 1997.
Farmers'
decisions and sun vs. shade in
general
Themes: sun vs. shade
technology, tree selection, pruning, inputs,
costs and benefits
- Beer, J., R. Muschler, E. Somarriba, D. Kass 1997. Maderables
como
sombra para cafe. Boletin PROMECAFE 76/77.
Brief overview of timber
species in cafetales of Costa Rica. (Annotated by JM)
- Beer,
J., R. Muschler, D. Kass, and E. Somarriba 1998. Shade
management in
coffee and cacao plantations. Agroforestry Systems
38: 139-164.
A detailed review of research on various shade benefits, also
numerous studies cited of negative effects of shade, including
decreased
yields and the occurrence of fungal diseases. (Annotated by
JM)
- Muschler, R. G. 1997. Sombra o sol para un cafetal sostenible:
Un
nuevo enfoque de una vieja discusion. In: Memorias del 18vo
Simposio
Latinoamericano de Caficultura, San Jose, Costa Rica,
Septiembre 1997.
A decision model is proposed based on soil condition and other
factors. (Annotated by JM)
- Mussak, M. F. and J. G. Laarman 1989. Farmer's production of
timber
trees in the cacao-coffee region of coastal Ecuador.
Agrofor. Syst 9:
155-170.
- Swantz, S. 1997. Economic Differences between Shaded
and Full
Sun Coffee Cultivation in Costa Rica. Paper presented at the
First
Sustainable Coffee Conference. Washington, DC: Smithsonian
Institution.
Production and land use
data
- FAO 1996. Production Yearbook 49: 171-173. Rome:
FAO.
Coffee and biodiversity
Themes:
Assessment of biodiversity, community structure, and
habitat quality of
shade coffee, cacao, citrus, and other
agroforestry or plantation
systems.
Implications: pest control and predator dominance, species
survival
of migrant and resident birds, maintenance of forest corridors
and
buffers, dispersal of native tree species
Note on ants: studies of
ant diversity and community structure in
tropical forests are key to
assessing the biodiversity of these
forests or agroforestry systems. Ants
constitute the greatest number
of animal species and greatest animal
biomass in tropical forests
around the world (refer to numerous figures
cited in Power 1996). The
territories of both ground and tree-foraging ants
tend to determine
the spatial pattern of the entire arthropod community
(see papers
cited in Power 1996). Power 1996 provides a good overview of
ant
diversity in different forest and agricultural landscapes. (Annotated by JM)
- Alguilar-Ortiz, F. 1982. Estudio ecologico de las aved del
cafetal.
In: Estudios Ecologia y el Agroecosistema Cafetalesa,
edited by E. Avila
Jimenez, pp. 103-128. INIREB Mexico.
- Greenberg, R. 1996. Managed
Forest Patches and the Diversity
of Birds in Southern Mexico. In: Forest
Patches in Tropical
Landscapes. Ed. J. Schellas and R. Greenberg.
Washington, DC:
Island Press.
- Holloway, J. D. and N. E. Stork
1991. The dimensions of
biodiversity: the use of invertebrates as
indicators of human
impact. In: The Biodiversity of Microorganisms and
Invertebrates:
its Role in Sustainable Agriculture, ed. by D. L.
Hawksworth.
London: CAB Intl.
- Kricher, John 2000. Evaluating
Shade-Grown Coffee and Its Importance to
Birds. Birding. 32(1):
57-60.
Kricher writes a review of recent bird-related research. He
summarizes
some interesting findings on coffee plantation structure
relating to avian
diversity.(Entry added 18 March 2000.
Annotated by PJB)
- Lobeira,
Santiago 1999.
Biodiversity
Implications of Growing Coffee in the Sierra de Manantlan's
Biosphere
Reserve.
Explores the possibility of introducing coffee as a
means of
preserving biodiversity in Mexico's Manantlan Reserve.
Identifies
obstacles to success, and concludes with policy
recommendations,
including government compensation and education of
farmers. (Annotated by DLG)
- Majer,
J. D. 1976. The ant mosaic in Ghana cocoa farms:
Further structural
considerations. J. Appl. Ecol. 13:145-156.
- Majer, J. D., J. H.
C. Delabie and M. R. B. Smith 1994.
Arboreal ant community patterns in
Brazilian cocoa farms.
Biotropica 26: 73-83.
- Moguel, Patricia
and Victor M. Toledo 1999. Biodiversity
Conservation in Traditional
Coffee Systems of Mexico. Conservation
Biology 13(1): 11-21.
Reviews the literature of quantitative biodiversity data for
shaded
and unshaded coffee agriculture in Mexico, covering five
groups of
organisms: plants, arthropods, birds, amphibians and
reptiles, and
terrestrial mammals. Estimates the absolute and
relative distribution
across Mexico of the five coffee production
systems: shaded monoculture
is most prevalent (42%). Spanish
abstract available. (Annotated by DLG)
- Nestel, D. and F. Dickshen 1990. The foraging kinetics of
ground ant
communities in different Mexican coffee agroecosystems.
Oecologia 84:
58-63.
- Perfecto, I., and R. Snelling. 1997? Biodiversity and
tropical
ecosystem transformation: Ant diversity in the coffee
agroecosystem in Costa Rica.
- Power, A. G. 1996. Arthropod
Diversity in Forest Patches and
Agroecosystems of Tropical Landscapes.
In: Forest Patches in
Tropical Landscapes, ed. Schellas and Greenberg.
Washington, DC:
Island Press.
- Robbins, C. D. et al. 1992.
Comparison of neotropical migrant
landbird populations wintering in
tropical forest, isolated forest
fragments, and agricultural lands. In:
Ecology and Conservation of
Neotropical Migrant Landbirds, ed. Hagan and
Johnston. Washington,
DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Room, P. M. 1971. The relative distribution of ant species in
Ghana's cocoa farms. J. Animal Ecology 40: 735-751.
- Roth, D. S.,
I. Perfecto, and B. Rathcke 1994. The effects of
management systems on
ground-foraging ant diveristy in Costa Rica.
Ecol. Applications 4:
423-436.
- Stork, N. E., and M. J. D. Brendell 1990. Variation in
the
insect fauna of Sulawesi trees with season, altitude, and forest
type. In: Insects and the Rain Forests of South East Asia, ed.
Knight
and Holloway. London: Royal Entomol. Soc.
- Torres, J. A. 1984.
Diversity and distribution of ant
communities in Puerto Rico. Biotropica
16: 296-303.
- Wunderle, J. and S. C. Latta 1994. Population
biology and
turnover of Nearctic migrants wintering in small coffee
plantations in the Dominican Republic. Journal für
Ornithologie
135: 477.
Effect of
agrochemicals
- Bouharmont, P., J. Awemo 1993. Etude de
l'effet de traitements
herbicides au Roundup sur la croissance et la
production du
cafeier Robusta. Café Cacao Thé 37(3).
Roundup was found to depress coffee production for the 1st 3
harvest
yrs, compared with weeding. (Annotated by JM)
- Boyce
et al 1994. Cafe y Desarrollo Sostenible: del Cultivo
Agroquimico a la
Produccion Organica en Costa Rica. Heredia:
EFUNA.
- Njoroge,
J.M. 90. Evaluation of Gallant, Basta and different
glyphosphat
formulations on weed managment in coffee. Nairobi:
Kenya Coffee
55(650).
Roundup resulted in 100% increased coffee production, but
note
that total production only 433 kg/ha. (Annotated by
JM)
Definitions of "shade coffee"
- Fuentes-Flores, R. 1979. Coffee production systems in Mexico.
In:
Workshop on Agroforestry Systems in Latin America, F. De las
Salas, ed.
Turrialba, Costa Rica: Centro Agronómico
Tropical de
Investigación y En señanza (CATIE).
- Holly, Don
1999. What is
Shade Coffee? Specialty Coffee Chronicle (Mar-Apr): 5.
Summarizes
the Specialty Coffee Association of America's definition of
shade-grown
coffee. Describes a farmer's pragmatic approach to shade, and points out
that
"those that wish to sell 'shade' coffee... have a lot of wiggle
room in which
to justify their practices." (Entry added
18 March 2000. Annotated by DLG)
- Nolasco, M. 1985. Café y sociedad en México.
México, DF: Centro de Ecodesarrollo.
- Smithsonian
Migratory Bird Center, 1997.
Shade
Management
Criteria for Bird-Friendly Coffee.
Political and socio-economic landscape
Themes:
community-state conflict or partnership, tenure rights,
technological
trends in agriculture, national programs, effects of
globalization
- Alcorn, J. B. 1996. Forest use and ownership: patterns,
issues, and
recommendations. In: Forest Patches in Tropical
Landscapes, ed. Schellas
and Greenberg. Washington, DC: Island
Press.
- Alcorn, J. B.,
and V. Toledo 1995. The role of tenurial shifts
in ecological
sustainability: property rights and natural resource
management in
Mexico. In: Property Rights in Social and Ecological
Context: Case
Studies and Design Applications, ed. Hanna and
Munasinghe. Washington,
DC: The World Bank.
- deGraaff, J. 1986. The Economics of Coffee.
Pudoc, Wageningen,
Netherlands.
- Grossman, Julie 2001. Mountain Groan.
A report from Chiapas state, Mexico: small-holding coffee farmers are being squeezed
by the government's low-intensity war against an indigenous movement called the Zapatista
National Liberation Army, which champions self-sufficiency. The article reviews recent developments
in certification programs for fair trade and organic labelling, from the farmer's viewpoint. A paradox:
small-scale farmers, unable for years to afford chemicals, have been farming organically by default,
but only large corporation-supported plantations are able to meet the record-keeping requirements
of organic-label certification.
"To the Chiapas farmers, fair trade means something more than economic independence. 'We are not only in the process of organizing to export coffee,' says Mut Vitz famer Mariano Gonzáles Gonzáles. 'We want to show consumers that indigenous people have dignity.'" (Entry added 22 April 2001.
Annotated by DLG)
- Hutto, Richard L. 1992.
Habitat distributions of migratory
landbird species in western Mexico.
In: Ecology and Conservation
of Neotropical Landbirds, ed. Hagan and
Johnston. Washington, DC:
Smithsonian Institution Press.
Proceedings of the 1989 Manomet Symposium.
- Marquez, C. 1988.
La produccion agricola de la union de
uniones ejidales y socieddes
campesinas de produccion de Chiapas:
Problematica y perspectivas de
desarrollo. Professional thesis in
agronomy. Univ. Autonoma Chapingo,
Mexico.
- Rice, R. 1993. New technology and coffee production:
examining
landscape transformation and international aid in northern
Latin
America. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center.
- Ridler, N. B. 1982. Implications of new coffee technology in
Central
America. Desarrollo Rural en las Americas 14(2): 63-71.
Includes
national production and income data. (Annotated by JM)
- Toledo, V. 1994. La Ecologia, Chiapas, y Articulo 27. Mexico:
Ediciones Quinto Sol.
- DeWalt, B. R., and M. W. Rees 1994. The
End of Agrarian Reform
in Mexico: Past Lessons, Future Prospects. San
Diego: Univ.
California.
Trade
implications
- Commission for Environmental Cooperation
1999. Measuring
Consumer Interest in Mexican Shade-grown Coffee: An
Assessment of
the Canadian, Mexican and U.S. Markets. Montréal:
CEC.
This study presents an assessment of consumer interest in, and
potential demand for, Mexican shade-grown coffee in North America.
It
confirms other market surveys, which demonstrate a certain
reluctance
among consumers to pay a price premium for Mexican
shade-grown coffee,
with U.S. residents more sensitive to paying
extra for shade-grown
coffee than either Canadian or Mexican
consumers. An annex presents
recent work from the Smithsonian
Migratory Bird Center towards criteria
for defining shade coffee.
A copy of the report is available at
http://www.cec.org. (Annotated by PJB)
- Seattle
Audubon Society 1999. Coffee, Birds and Trade Policy:
Making the
Connection.
This is a combination of material, with a primer on
coffee
production, sun vs. shade, shade gradients/spectrum, the impact
on
birds, organic, fair trade, small-scale coffee production, and the
WTO. It's an effort to blend the issues of fair trade and shade
coffee.
You can access the report from the following site:
http://www.earthjustice.org/work/international.html.
(Annotated by PJB)
Forest fragmentation effects
- Bierregaard,
Richard O., and V. H. Dale 1996. Island in an
ever-changing sea: the
ecological and socioeconomic dynamics of
Amazonian rainforest fragments.
In: Forest Patches in Tropical
landscapes, ed. Schelhas and Greenberg.
Washington, DC: Island
Press.
Observed effects on fauna and
forest structure after
fragmentation into different sizes (Biological
Dynamics of Forest
Fragments Project of Manaus) and computer model of
land use change
(DELTA). See also Lessons from Amazonia, book in press
1998. (Annotated by JM)
- Guindon,
Carlos F. 1996. The Importance of Forest Fragments to
the Maintenance of
Regional Biodiversity in Costa Rica. In: Forest
Patches in Tropical
Landscapes, ed. Schelhas and Greenberg.
Washington, DC: Island Press.
Farmers' micro-corridors and servidumbres ecologicas
(easements) , as they pertain to altitudinal migrants such as
quetzals.
(Annotated by JM)
- Schelhas, J. 1996. Land use choice and forest patches in Costa
Rica.
In: Forest Patches in Tropical Landscapes, ed. Schelas and
Greenberg.
Washington, DC: Island Press.
More modelling, some references to
coffee. (Annotated by JM)
- Wunderle, Joseph M., Jr. and Latta, Steven C. 2000. Winter Site Fidelity of Nearctic Migrants
in Shade Coffee Plantations of Different Sizes in the Dominican Republic. The Auk 117(3): 596-614.
The paper presents the study of three Nearctic migrant species (American Redstart, Black-and-white Warbler, and Black-throated Blue Warbler) wintering in 14 isolated shade coffee plantations in the Dominican Republic.
From the Discussion: "We found that winter site fidelity in three Nearctic migrant species in shade coffee plantations was comparable to site fidelity found in some native tropical forests.... Our findings indicate that increasing tropical forest fragmentation ... may not severely exacerbate the negative effects of habitat loss from tropical deforestation for these three species of migrants." (Entry added 23 April 2001.
Annotated by DLG)
Other pertinent readings
- Greenberg, Russell et al. The Impact of Avian Insectivory
on Arthropods and Leaf Damage in Some Guatemalan Coffee Plantations. Ecology 81(6): 1750-1755.
Abstract: Experimental work has established that vertebrates can
have a large impact on the abundance of arthropods in temperate forest and
grasslands, as well as on tropical islands. The importance of vertebrate
insectivory has only rarely been evaluated for mainland tropical
ecosystems. In this study, we used exclosures to measure the impact of
birds on arthropods in Guatemalan coffee plantations. Variation in shade
management on coffee farms provides a gradient of similar habitats that
vary in the complexity of vegetative structure and floristics. We
hypothesized that shaded coffee plantations, which support a higher
abundance of insectivorous birds, would experience relatively greater
levels of predation than would the sun coffee farms. We found a reduction
(64-80%) in the number of large (> 5 mm in length) but not small arthropods
in both coffee types which was consistent across most taxonomic groups and
ecological guilds. We also found a small but significant increase in the
frequency of herbivore damage on leaves in the exclosures. This level of
predation suggests that birds may help in reducing herbivore numbers and is
also consistent with food limitation for birds in coffee agroecosystems.
However, the presence of shade did not have an effect on levels of
insectivory. (Entry added 22 April
2001.)
- Muschler, R. G., and A. Bonnemann 1997. Potentials and
limitations
of agroforestry for changing land-use in the tropics:
experiences from
Central America. Forest Ecol. Mgmt. 91:61-73.
History of research
and extension services of the CATIE
institution (Costa Rica) and lessons
learned. (Annotated by JM)
-
Rainforest Alliance 1997?. The Conservation Coffee Campaign
Organizer's Kit.
This 49-page booklet is a manual on promoting shade coffee. It covers an
introduction to the issue, event options (including cupping, petitioning,
and letter-writing), a media campaign outline (with sample press releases),
sources for certified shade-grown coffee, references, a list of birds
commonly seen on coffee plantations, related clip art, and other material.
It is available as a PDF file at the Alliance's
web site.
(Entry added 22 April
2001. Annotated by PJB)
Last
updated: 23 April 2001. Send comments, recommendations, corrections to David Gorsline.
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