Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Integrating Green Infrastructure into Sustainable Agriculture to Enhance Soil Health, Biodiversity, and Microclimate Resilience

Matthew Chidozie Ogwu; Enoch Akwasi Kosoe

Sustainability · 2025

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Summary

This review, published in the journal Sustainability, examines the role of green infrastructure in enhancing the ecological functioning of agricultural systems, with particular attention to soil health, on-farm biodiversity, and microclimate buffering capacity. Drawing on existing literature, it likely argues that purposeful integration of structural landscape elements — including agroforestry, riparian buffers, and native vegetation strips — can deliver measurable improvements in soil biological activity and localised climate regulation. The paper contributes a conceptual and applied framework for embedding green infrastructure within sustainable agricultural planning and policy.

UK applicability

The findings are broadly applicable to UK conditions, where policy frameworks such as the Environmental Land Management scheme (ELMs) actively incentivise green infrastructure integration — including hedgerow restoration, agroforestry, and buffer strips — making this review relevant to both practitioners and land managers navigating agri-environment commitments.

Key measures

Soil organic matter; soil biodiversity indices; species richness; microclimate temperature and humidity variation; erosion rates; carbon sequestration estimates

Outcomes reported

The study likely examines how green infrastructure elements — such as hedgerows, cover crops, agroforestry, and vegetative buffers — affect soil health indicators, biodiversity metrics, and microclimatic conditions within agricultural landscapes. It probably synthesises evidence on co-benefits and trade-offs of integrating these features into farming systems.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Agroecology & landscape ecology
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
International
System type
Mixed agroecological systems
DOI
10.3390/su17093838
Catalogue ID
NRmo3f02hq-07j

Topic tags

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