Agriculture is the largest land use impact that humans exert 1.
Since 1961, world cropland area has been steadily growing, while pasture land may have peaked 2.
Following are estimates of land use required by particular crops.
From 1973 to 2000, land converted into agricultural use in the contiguous (lower 48) United States is estimated as follows.
Valuation of ecosystem services that these lands provide varies widely. We estimate these valuations as follows.
Over these nearly 30 years, the annual ecosystem service gain/loss of agricultural conversion in the United States is estimated as follows.
A gain in services from converting grassland is about counterbalanced by a loss of services from converting forests and wetlands. Avoidance of expanding agriculture into ecologically sensitive wetlands can better maintain ecosystem service value.
Roser, M., Ritchie, H. "Land Use". Our World in Data. Accessed March 23, 2019. ↩
Ausubel, J., Wernick, I., Waggoner, P. "Peak Farmland and the Prospect for Land Sparing". Population and Development Review (Supplement) 38, pp. 221-242. February 2013. ↩
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. "FAOSTAT". ↩ ↩2
Food and Agriculture Organization. "Nutritive Factors". Accessed January 7, 2020. ↩
Clark, M., Tilman, D. "Comparative analysis of environmental impacts of agricultural production systems, agricultural input efficiency, and food choice". Environmental Research Letters 12(6). June 2017. ↩
Froehlich, H., Runge, C., Gentry, R., Gaines, S., Halpern, B. "Comparative terrestrial feed and land use of an aquaculture-dominant world". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115(20), pp. 5295-5300. May 2018. ↩
United States Geological Survey. "National Land Cover Database". Accessed July 23, 2021. ↩
Environmental Systems Analysis Group. "Ecosystem Services Partnership". Accessed July 23, 2021. ↩