“…Under this scenario, when agroforestry interventions are introduced and individuals adopt agroforestry practices, the practices lead to improved yields and income generation as well as ecosystem service generation.Under this pathway, three key elements, participant engagement, program exposure, and indirect financial support, lead to agroforestry adoption, which is then intended to lead to positive productivity, profitability, and human well-being outcomes through diversified production and income streams, improved soil fertility, and other changes. The promoted practices are simultaneously supposed to lead to improved ecosystem services outcomes, such as soil and water management, soil fertility replenishment, habitat provision, and carbon sequestration.,,,Thorlakson and Neufeldt (2012),Dai et al (2017),Sills and Caviglia-Harris (2015), and examined interventions along this pathway. The studied interventions tended to lead to increased food security through improved yields or dietary diversity.…”