Prairie Farmer Logo

American Farmland Trust works with women landowners to increase use of conservation practices.

June 4, 2020

2 Min Read

American Farmland Trust and its partners have developed a new model to reduce nutrient and soil sediment runoff on leased farmland in the Great Lakes region. By engaging women landowners, their operators and farm retailers, the team is expanding the use of conservation practices to improve soil health and reduce runoff in the Great Lakes Basin. Pilots for the model took place in the Portage and Toussaint River Basins in northwestern Ohio and the Genesee River Basin in western New York.

The “Landowners and Farmers Partnering for Clean Water in the Great Lakes” model is built around three strategies:

  • engaging women landowners through “learning circles,”

  • organizing workshops for farm operators who lease their land, and

  • gathering knowledge from agricultural retailers and crop consultants.

This team began the work after identifying a key barrier to the implementation of conservation practices that safeguard water quality: farmers who lease the land they farm do not have as many incentives to use conservation practices as do farmers who own the land they farm. In the Great Lakes region, up to 49% of the farmland is leased. A significant share of leased farmland is owned by women, a traditionally underserved sector in agriculture, and a sector that is expected to increase.

“Non-operating landowners, particularly women, are an important part of the solution to the nutrient problems in the Great Lakes,” said Brian Brandt, agriculture conservation innovations director at AFT. “This team has developed new strategies and tools that bring together the landowners and tenant farmers to put more conservation practices on the land while sharing the rewards and the risks. It’s a win-win-win for the landowner, the farmer and the Great Lakes.”

Toolkits designed for non-operating landowners, farmers who rent land, and the agricultural professionals who serve them are available on American Farmland Trust’s website.

Other resources that are also available include how-to guides for conducting learning circles and promoting better communication between landowners and farmers, and a series of written and video profiles about participants in both watersheds.

Funding for “Landowners and Farmers Partnering for Clean Water in the Great Lakes” was provided by the Great Lakes Protection Fund. 

Source: American Farmland Trust, which is solely responsible for the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset. 

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like