Evolution of Farming Systems in the Mediterranean High Mountain: The Case of the Alpujarra Alta (Spain)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Beginnings of the Alpujarra Alta Agrarian System: From Neolithic Times to the Roman Period
3. The Decisive Arab Influence
- Complex development of irrigation with new water-management techniques replaced the natural location of irrigation points of the Roman period and the advent of large systems of water channels, whose layout to some extent still exists today.
- New settlers, mostly of Berber and some of Arab origin, not only brought institutional changes in cultural patterns, social relations and administration, but also provided new farming skills and cultivation techniques.
- The introduction of new crops, particularly horticultural ones, included more than 30 different species that have been documented in the area, some preexisting in the zone, or other zones of Al-Andalus, and others introduced by the new settlers. Crops included vegetables, pear, apple, peach and pomegranate. [26] posited that most of the irrigated plants brought by the Arabs from the East had already been adapted to Al-Andalus by the tenth century. In fact, crops such as eggplant, watermelon, certain types of cucumber, banana, orange, lemon, rice, sugar cane and cotton are mentioned as early as the ninth century.
- The emergence of the silk industry introduced mulberry trees and the development of a local industry. [24], based on the information of the Habices Books of the Alpujarra municipalities (The books of habices were books that recorded the goods (usually lands, houses and plantations but also mills, ovens, stables, etc.) that the Muslim faithful donated, in property or in usufruct, to the mosques in the towns of Muslim Spain. In Arabic, these goods and rights were called waqf (plural awqaf) and in Maghreb Berber they were called habis, giving the Spanish name of habices. The books of habices began with a description of the zone, its cultures, and its agrarian and agroindustrial infrastructures. After the Christian conquest, in 1506, these funds were distributed among the Christian churches. Subsequently, in 1572 the habices, along with other properties expropriated or purchased from the Moors who left the country, were described in the so-called Books of Apeos. Both the Book of Habits and the later Books of Apeos that have been preserved are often a valuable source of information concerning fifteenth and sixteenth century agriculture of this area), estimated that 75% of the trees in the area at the end of the fifteenth century were mulberry for silkworm rearing, reflecting the importance of this industry during the Moorish period. The Almerian agronomist Ibn Luyun at the beginning of the fourteenth century claimed, perhaps with exaggeration, that the Alpujarra was the region that produced the most silk in the world and therefore was called land of twisted silk (Tierra del sirgo) [27].
- Increase in the surface area cultivated resulted from the development of irrigation. Not only were old dry lands from the Roman era transformed by irrigation, but new lands not previously cultivated, often by crossing hillsides, sometimes with steep slopes, were farmed.
- Increase in the distance of transhumance boosted the development of livestock, particularly sheep, the most abundant domestic animal at this time. Sedentary family livestock (cattle, sheep, goats) raised on the farm (providing manure and taking advantage of forage crops), coexisted with livestock that was herded to summer pastures at high elevations. In any case, despite their importance, livestock animals were always less abundant than might be expected in such a mountainous area. The Alpujarra in the Arabs period and later depended more on cultivation than on livestock raising.
4. The Impact That the Expulsion of the Moriscos Exerted on the Agrarian System
- The uneven land distribution among the new settlers, coming mainly from Galicia, Andalusia, Castile and Asturias, led in some cases to farms that were too small to prosper. Only farmland was given to the new settlers because the pastures and the mountain areas of the Upper Alpujarra remained under the direct administration of the Spanish Crown. The aim was to maintain irrigated agriculture in the Alpujarra similar to that existing in the Moorish period. For this, the Spanish administration, in exceptional cases, did not expel some Morisco families who knew how to manage the complex irrigation system and were expected to transfer this knowledge to the new settlers.
- The decline of the silk industry, which began to have market problems at the end of the sixteenth century, was aggravated by the expulsion of Muslim artisans and Jewish merchants. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, strong competition in silk production arose in other areas such as eastern Spain (Murcia, Valencia), and Italy. However, even in the first half of the nineteenth century, some villages in the area still produced “mulberry silk”, in fact [28] (volume 2, p. 200) in a general description of agriculture of the Alpujarra still includes silk among the agro-industrial products of the area, after oil, wine, almonds, and locally cured ham.
- New crops such as corn and potatoes from America, grew in economic importance in the area.
- The partial failure of the repopulation policy, especially for establishing farming families, resulted because many new settlers soon left the land, disenchanted by the colonization conditions imposed. Thus, the number of families working the land in the Alpujarra plummeted to less than one tenth between 1565 and 1590 as a direct result of the expulsion of the Moriscos.
- A decrease in irrigated land followed the population decline, with the consequent abandonment of part of traditional irrigation networks. This decrease was exacerbated by a boom in the livestock farms, above all herded sheep, which were more familiar to most new settlers than were irrigated crops. With the livestock farm, dry-cereal-fallow-pasture crops developed.
5. The Evolved Agrarian System
- Irrigated crops: In the vegas and orchards: winter and summer cereals, table vegetables, legumes, potatoes and fruit trees. From the beginning of the nineteenth century, the bean was introduced into the area, which became widely associated with the cultivation of maize.High-elevation irrigation: was used generally for barley, rye and potato.
- Rainfed crops: Cereals (not very frequent), grapevine, fig tree and almond tree.
- Livestock: Livestock associated with agriculture (sheep, goats, a few cattle and family pigs) coexisted with herding, mainly sheep. Livestock became abundant, with small ruminants being the most common, although milk was never used at the industrial scale. Family cheese was made by the shepherds, some artisan types still being available up to 30 years ago.
6. The Beginning of the Degradation of the System: from the Rural Exodus until the End of the Twentieth Century
- Abandonment of agriculture in part of the land previously cultivated, due to lack of population.
- Decline of the mountain livestock: decrease of summer grazing in the areas of higher elevation and the disappearance of livestock herded by salaried herders seeking winter grazing on the coastal mountains (As an extreme example of this, the Barranco de Poqueira, one of the most representative ravines of the Alpujarra Alta, in 1975 had more than 15,000 head of sheep distributed among 14 large herds (apart from isolated animals and very small herds), while 20 years later only 3109 head were owned by 27 farmers, indicating that large flocks herded by salaried herders were replaced by small family flocks).
- Decline of the polyculture of the Vegas and orchards: At the beginning of the rural exodus, the average size of an irrigated farm in the Alpujarra Alta was 5 obradas (equivalent to 1.5 ha), a size clearly insufficient for survival. The rural exodus increased this average size, since part of the abandoned lands went to increase the farms that remained active, doubling their average surface area in 20 years. However, a technical limitation was the impossibility of mechanizing or of employing more labor, preventing the farms from further increasing their size.
- The entry of the fragile agricultural system of the area into a market economy: The increasingly globalized market hastened the decline of the system. The polyculture of vega associated with livestock barely covered, even with a huge workforce use, the nutritional needs of families in the first decades of the second half of the twentieth century.
- The disappearance of activities that traditionally provided complementary income to agriculture, such as mowing and harvesting outside the region, also contributed to the degradation of the agrarian system. The mechanization of agriculture on the extensive Spanish plains after 1950 reduced the possibilities of peasants from Alpujarra to work outside during the harvest as traditional sources of complementary income for the inhabitants of the area. Specifically, farmers from the Alpujarra Alta travelled to the basins and plateaus of the Intrabetic Trough, often to the Guadix and Baza Basins.
- The closure of certain mines, once abundant in the area, and the completion of some hydroelectric works that had occupied a significant part of the workforce, also contributed to the rural exodus and further degradation of the system.
- The farms that survived in 1991, were the most resistant, and the level of marginalization was lower.
- The area underwent the strong development of activities economically more profitable than agriculture, basically related to tourism and services in general, partly as a consequence of the performance of the LEADER Programs. This development helped to revitalize certain artisanal activities, especially textiles and ceramics, but also agro-food, and it greatly stimulated construction, but often without proper controls. This created many opportunities for part-time farming, with multiple activities in the family, which has to some extent maintained farms that otherwise might have disappeared. While the full-time farming exceeded 40% in 1991, in 2001 this figure fell by half.
- LEADER programs induced in the area institutional innovations linked with associations and social partnerships. This fact triggered a certain development of agrarian marketing associations, which prior to 1990 had been scarce in the area.
7. The Agrarian System in the Twenty-First Century
- The greater possibilities of part-time farming discussed above.
- The agro-food transformation and industrialization projects partially financed by the Europeans RD Programs have provided new opportunities for added value on certain agricultural products.
- The increase in establishing marketing associations, as a result of social changes and the local “institutional architecture” induced by RD processes, boosts the value of local agricultural production and its access to markets.
- Changes in consumer demand for local artisanal and ecological foods and other local products. This opens business opportunities for agricultural products in the area. The development of organic farming, which was already incipient in the 1990s, is now well established in the region. For about three years the Commonwealth of Municipalities of the Alpujarra of Granada province (Comunidad de Municipios de La Alpujarra Granadina), together with the Alpujarra Food Association (Asociación Alimentaria de la Alpujarra), clearly support this type of agriculture.
- A large part of the Alpujarra Alta lies within the Sierra Nevada Natural Park an environmental protection figure established in July 1989, and later within the Sierra Nevada National Park (The National Park has the highest environmental protection in Spain, under the declaration of the Spanish state. There are currently 15 National Parks that cover 0.7 % of Spanish territory, the largest being the Sierra Nevada, which includes part of the Alpujarra. The Natural Park has the strongest regional environmental protection, under the declaration of the Andalusian regional government), constituted in January 1999. This situation, though involving some minor restrictions for certain forms of agriculture and livestock breeding, which could not always be compatible with environmental protection, nevertheless presents the advantage that marketing strategy can be used for local food products by using the distinction of quality and origin related to a national park. Local farmers could use the geographical name to elicit a willingness-to-pay from food consumers.
- The increase in the local food demand, both by the population itself and by the many tourists visiting the region, represents a niche market, practically captive, for local agricultural products.
- The development of New Information and Communication Technologies in the area help mitigate the distance of the markets from population centers, facilitating commercial development of local agricultural production.
- The Alpujarra Alta has been strongly altered by humans, and, despite its altitude, the agrarian system covers a large portion of its surface area. The disappearance or decline of agriculture could be ecologically catastrophic. No decisions should be made concerning agriculture considering exclusively its financial profitability, but including other functions of an environmental, territorial and sociocultural nature that must be considered.
- Related to the above, the disappearance of the irrigation in high-elevation areas, and the subsequent neglect of the channels, has caused the snowmelt water to flow through natural channels, with the consequent flooding and destruction of pathways and roads, resulting in a high cost of repairs that would have been avoided by helping to maintain this type of agriculture.
- As shown by [39,40], the landscape of polyculture irrigation in orchards or terraces is, by far, the component of the Alpujarra Alta landscape most valued by visitors to the area, in such a way that the decrease in this type of agriculture, would undoubtedly affect tourism in the area, which is currently its fastest growing economic activity. Decisions that may affect the agrarian system should take such synergy into account.
- The extremely complex network of mixed irrigation channels and drainage ditches, where the system of stepped networks of channels and reinforcement, operating for a millennium, is a rare example of culture and water management, which properly valued, could become a factor of territorial competitiveness for tourism.
- Promoting the improvement of the structure of farms.
- Improving the infrastructure, particularly roads and access routes to farms.
- Promoting farmer associations.
- Acting towards the internalization, where appropriate, of the aforementioned positive externalities of the agrarian systems.
- Designing and taking specific measures for maintaining, and, where appropriate, rehabilitating and readapting the networks of old water channels, and their value for heritage and tourism.
- Implementing measures that support and promote greater added value of local products, whether based on quality, origin, sustainable production system or industrial transformation.
- Fomenting the social revaluation of agriculture and farming professions in the local cultural system.
- Implementing, at the local level, an efficient model of in situ agricultural experimentation of a systemic and participatory nature, appropriately connected with regional and national research and development centers.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Calatrava, J.; Sayadi, S. Evolution of Farming Systems in the Mediterranean High Mountain: The Case of the Alpujarra Alta (Spain). Sustainability 2019, 11, 704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11030704
Calatrava J, Sayadi S. Evolution of Farming Systems in the Mediterranean High Mountain: The Case of the Alpujarra Alta (Spain). Sustainability. 2019; 11(3):704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11030704
Chicago/Turabian StyleCalatrava, Javier, and Samir Sayadi. 2019. "Evolution of Farming Systems in the Mediterranean High Mountain: The Case of the Alpujarra Alta (Spain)" Sustainability 11, no. 3: 704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11030704
APA StyleCalatrava, J., & Sayadi, S. (2019). Evolution of Farming Systems in the Mediterranean High Mountain: The Case of the Alpujarra Alta (Spain). Sustainability, 11(3), 704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11030704