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Sustainable intensification to advan...
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Lal, Rattan.
Sustainable intensification to advance food security and enhance climate resilience in Africa[electronic resource] /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
631.58
書名/作者:
Sustainable intensification to advance food security and enhance climate resilience in Africa/ edited by Rattan Lal ... [et al.].
其他作者:
Lal, Rattan.
出版者:
Cham : : Springer International Publishing :, 2015.
面頁冊數:
xxii, 665 p. : : ill. (some col.), digital ;; 24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer eBooks
標題:
Sustainable agriculture - Africa.
標題:
Alternative agriculture - Africa.
標題:
Food security - Africa.
標題:
Environment.
標題:
Soil Science & Conservation.
標題:
Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts.
標題:
Sustainable Development.
標題:
Environmental Management.
ISBN:
9783319093604 (electronic bk.)
ISBN:
9783319093598 (paper)
摘要、提要註:
Whereas the Green Revolution of the 1960's and 1970's in South Asia and elsewhere did not happen in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), several regions of SSA have experienced substantial improvements in crop yields and growth in agricultural production since the beginning of the 21st century. Yet, no drastic increase in per capita food grain production has occurred, primarily because of rapid rates of population growth. On the contrary, per capita food production has decreased in East Africa, Southern Africa and Central Africa. Thus, hunger, malnutrition and poverty remain endemic throughout SSA. Agriculture in SSA is vulnerable to harsh and uncertain climate variations. Resource-poor and small landholders are particularly susceptible to their negative impacts. SSA is one of the global hotspots for adverse effects of climate change on agricultural production and the environment. These include severe problems of soil degradation, nutrient and organic matter depletion, water contamination and eutrophication, and loss of biodiversity, especially the below-ground's diversity. Thus sustainable intensification (SI) can play an important role in enhancing agricultural production while restoring degraded/desertified soils, mitigating global warming by sequestering atmospheric CO2 in soils and vegetation (forests), adapting to climate change by using recommended management practices of the so called climate-resilient or climate-strategic agriculture, improving farm income, and empowering women and other under-privileged populations. The relevance of SI is more now than ever before because of decreasing per capita arable land area, competing uses of land for non-agricultural purposes, increasing risks of land/soil degradation, and changing and uncertain climate. Resource-poor and smallholder farmers of SSA neither have the capacity to adapt nor have the resilience to recover.
電子資源:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09360-4
Sustainable intensification to advance food security and enhance climate resilience in Africa[electronic resource] /
Sustainable intensification to advance food security and enhance climate resilience in Africa
[electronic resource] /edited by Rattan Lal ... [et al.]. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2015. - xxii, 665 p. :ill. (some col.), digital ;24 cm.
Whereas the Green Revolution of the 1960's and 1970's in South Asia and elsewhere did not happen in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), several regions of SSA have experienced substantial improvements in crop yields and growth in agricultural production since the beginning of the 21st century. Yet, no drastic increase in per capita food grain production has occurred, primarily because of rapid rates of population growth. On the contrary, per capita food production has decreased in East Africa, Southern Africa and Central Africa. Thus, hunger, malnutrition and poverty remain endemic throughout SSA. Agriculture in SSA is vulnerable to harsh and uncertain climate variations. Resource-poor and small landholders are particularly susceptible to their negative impacts. SSA is one of the global hotspots for adverse effects of climate change on agricultural production and the environment. These include severe problems of soil degradation, nutrient and organic matter depletion, water contamination and eutrophication, and loss of biodiversity, especially the below-ground's diversity. Thus sustainable intensification (SI) can play an important role in enhancing agricultural production while restoring degraded/desertified soils, mitigating global warming by sequestering atmospheric CO2 in soils and vegetation (forests), adapting to climate change by using recommended management practices of the so called climate-resilient or climate-strategic agriculture, improving farm income, and empowering women and other under-privileged populations. The relevance of SI is more now than ever before because of decreasing per capita arable land area, competing uses of land for non-agricultural purposes, increasing risks of land/soil degradation, and changing and uncertain climate. Resource-poor and smallholder farmers of SSA neither have the capacity to adapt nor have the resilience to recover.
ISBN: 9783319093604 (electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-319-09360-4doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
603196
Sustainable agriculture
--Africa.
LC Class. No.: S472.A1
Dewey Class. No.: 631.58
Sustainable intensification to advance food security and enhance climate resilience in Africa[electronic resource] /
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Whereas the Green Revolution of the 1960's and 1970's in South Asia and elsewhere did not happen in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), several regions of SSA have experienced substantial improvements in crop yields and growth in agricultural production since the beginning of the 21st century. Yet, no drastic increase in per capita food grain production has occurred, primarily because of rapid rates of population growth. On the contrary, per capita food production has decreased in East Africa, Southern Africa and Central Africa. Thus, hunger, malnutrition and poverty remain endemic throughout SSA. Agriculture in SSA is vulnerable to harsh and uncertain climate variations. Resource-poor and small landholders are particularly susceptible to their negative impacts. SSA is one of the global hotspots for adverse effects of climate change on agricultural production and the environment. These include severe problems of soil degradation, nutrient and organic matter depletion, water contamination and eutrophication, and loss of biodiversity, especially the below-ground's diversity. Thus sustainable intensification (SI) can play an important role in enhancing agricultural production while restoring degraded/desertified soils, mitigating global warming by sequestering atmospheric CO2 in soils and vegetation (forests), adapting to climate change by using recommended management practices of the so called climate-resilient or climate-strategic agriculture, improving farm income, and empowering women and other under-privileged populations. The relevance of SI is more now than ever before because of decreasing per capita arable land area, competing uses of land for non-agricultural purposes, increasing risks of land/soil degradation, and changing and uncertain climate. Resource-poor and smallholder farmers of SSA neither have the capacity to adapt nor have the resilience to recover.
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