Fr. 69.00

Major Crops and Water Scarcity in Egypt - Irrigation Water Management under Changing Climate

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book includes multi-disciplinary quantifications of the effect of climate change on water requirements of wheat, maize, rice and sugarcane. Furthermore, it provides on-farm management that faces water scarcity under current situation and under climate change. Changing cultivation method (raised beds instead of furrows or basins) or increasing irrigation application efficiency (sprinkler or drip systems instead of surface irrigation) can reduce the applied water. Irrigated agriculture, although profitable, it endures wasteful use of valuable water resources. Taking into account the risk of climate change, developing countries like Egypt will highly suffer. Furthermore, the effect of intercropping (two crops use the applied water to one of them), and/or using crop rotations (arrange crops to reduce the applied water, increase water productivity and sustain soil fertility) on production and consumed irrigation water by crops were comprehensively analyzed.

List of contents

Evapotranspiration under Changing Climate.- Water Requirements for Major Crops.- Significance of Reduction of Applied Irrigation Water to Wheat Crop.- Combating Adverse Consequences of Climate Change on Maize Crop.-High Water Consuming Crops under Control: Case of Rice Crop.- High Water Consuming Crops under Control: Case of Sugarcane Crop.- Unconventional solution to increase crop production under water scarcity.- Recommendations to Policy Makers to Face Water Scarcity.

Summary

This book includes multi-disciplinary quantifications of the effect of climate change on water requirements of wheat, maize, rice and sugarcane. Furthermore, it provides on-farm management that faces water scarcity under current situation and under climate change. Changing cultivation method (raised beds instead of furrows or basins) or increasing irrigation application efficiency (sprinkler or drip systems instead of surface irrigation) can reduce the applied water. Irrigated agriculture, although profitable, it endures wasteful use of valuable water resources. Taking into account the risk of climate change, developing countries like Egypt will highly suffer. Furthermore, the effect of intercropping (two crops use the applied water to one of them), and/or using crop rotations (arrange crops to reduce the applied water, increase water productivity and sustain soil fertility) on production and consumed irrigation water by crops were comprehensively analyzed.

Product details

Authors Tahany Noreldin, Samiha Ouda, Ahmed Taha, Abd El-Hafeez Zohry
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2015
 
EAN 9783319217703
ISBN 978-3-31-921770-3
No. of pages 126
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 8 mm
Weight 250 g
Illustrations XII, 126 p. 81 illus., 44 illus. in color.
Series SpringerBriefs in Water Science and Technology
SpringerBriefs in Water Science and Technology
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Geosciences

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