Aaron Wightman, co-director of the Cornell Maple Program at the agroforestry research plot within the maple sugarbush at Arnot Forest.

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Cornell research designs maple sugarbush agroforestry system

Virtually all of the world’s maple syrup is produced in Canada, the Northeast U.S. and some upper Midwestern U.S. states, where natural conditions for maple sugaring are perfect: wet summers, cold winters and springs with fluctuating temperatures above and below freezing. The same environmental conditions that support maple trees also produce a host of fruits, nuts and berries, like pawpaws, juneberries and hazelnuts.

The Cornell Maple Program seeks to combine these natural treasures. Aaron Wightman ’97, co-director of the maple program is leading a multi-year study on growing high-value fruit and nut species within the 350-acre maple sugarbush in Cornell’s Arnot Forest. Such agroforestry systems – in which producers collect forest products and grow agricultural crops simultaneously – can increase farming efficiency and profitability, diversify crop offerings and strengthen business resilience. To support producers, the maple program is also developing and testing distinctive products like maple-elderberry wine, maple-pawpaw ice cream and maple hazelnut spreads.

“There’s been a huge increase in demand for products that are locally grown, all natural and made with ingredients that customers recognize,” Wightman said. “We wanted to develop more products from a diversified set of crops that would stand out in the marketplace, bring people to these farms and help New York maple businesses be profitable.”

Read more in the CALS Newsroom.

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