Understanding the link between biodiversity and resilience of the agricultural sector in European Mediterranean countries: Lea Nicita, researcher at CMCC Foundation and Yale School of the Environment, wins The International Sustainability and Food Award – Bologna Award 2021.
Estimating the impact of climate change on the agricultural sector by assessing the importance of preserving biodiversity to increase the resilience of agroecosystems in Mediterranean Europe. This is the subject of the study of Lea Nicita, researcher at CMCC Foundation and Yale School of the Environment, awarded on World Food Day 2021 at the 6th edition of the Bologna Award, the International Sustainability and Food Award.
Conceived and promoted by CAAB, Centro Agroalimentare di Bologna, in collaboration with Fondazione FICO, the award aims to promote a new and widespread culture and to support scientific and technological research on agri-food sustainability.
Lea Nicita is Principal Investigator of the project “Climate change Resilience of Agricultural Systems”, funded by the European Commission with an individual research grant under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions program. The researcher was awarded ex aequo with Alessandro Matese, coordinator of the Institute of Bioeconomy – National Research Council, who, in his studies, tests technologies and methodologies of digital agriculture to optimize the management of irrigation according to actual crop water requirements.
“Biodiversity at every level, from genetic to ecosystem diversity, supports the capacity of agricultural systems to provide ecosystem services and to cope with stresses and shocks, including climate shocks,” explains Lea Nicita in an article in Il Manifesto. “Adaptation measures based on biodiversity conservation are a viable and feasible option to minimize risks and ensure agrifood sustainability, given also the high diversity and high ecological value that characterize the agroecosystems of Mediterranean countries.”