• Authors:
    • Donkoh, S. A.
    • Amikuzino, J.
  • Source: African Crop Science Journal
  • Volume: 20
  • Issue: Suppl. 2
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: Climate variability, the short-term fluctuations in average weather conditions and agriculture affect each other. Climate variability affects the agroecological and growing conditions of crops and livestock, and is recently believed to be the greatest impediment to the realisation of the first Millennium Development Goal of reducing poverty and food insecurity in arid and semi-arid regions of developing countries. Conversely, agriculture is a major contributor to climate variability and change by emitting greenhouse gases and reducing the agroecology's potential for carbon sequestration. What however, is the empirical evidence of this inter-dependence of climate variability and agriculture in Sub-Sahara Africa? In this paper, we provide some insight into the long run relationship between inter-annual variations in temperature and rainfall, and annual yields of the most important staple food crops in Northern Ghana. Applying pooled panel data of rainfall, temperature and yields of the selected crops from 1976 to 2010 to cointegration and Granger causality models, there is cogent evidence of cointegration between seasonal, total rainfall and crop yields; and causality from rainfall to crop yields in the Sudano-Guinea Savannah and Guinea Savannah zones of Northern Ghana. This suggests that inter-annual yields of the crops have been influenced by the total amounts of rainfall in the planting season. Temperature variability over the study period is however stationary, and is suspected to have minimal effect, if any, on crop yields. Overall, the results confirm the appropriateness of our attempt in modelling long-term relationships between the climate and crop yield variables.
  • Authors:
    • Vasquez-Murrieta, S.
    • Gutierrez-Miceli, F. A.
    • Montes-Molina, J.
    • Marsch, R.
    • Luna-Guido, M.
    • Verhulst, N.
    • Ramirez-Villanueva, D. A.
    • Patino-Zuniga, L.
    • Gutierrez-Oliva, V. F.
    • Dendooven, L.
    • Govaerts, B.
  • Source: Science of The Total Environment
  • Volume: 431
  • Issue: August
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: In 1991, the 'International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center' (CIMMYT) started a field experiment in the rain fed Mexican highlands to investigate conservation agriculture (CA) as a sustainable alternative for conventional maize production practices (CT). CT techniques, characterized by deep tillage, monoculture and crop residue removal, have deteriorated soil fertility and reduced yields. CA, which combines minimum tillage, crop rotations and residue retention, restores soil fertility and increases yields. Soil organic matter increases in CA compared to CT, but increases in greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) in CA might offset the gains obtained to mitigate global warming. Therefore, CO2, CH4 and N2O emissions, soil temperature, C and water content were monitored in CA and CT treatments in 2010-2011. The cumulative GHG emitted were similar for CA and CT in both years, but the C content in the 0-60 cm layer was higher in CA (117.7 Mg C ha(-1)) than in CT (69.7 Mg C ha(-1)). The net global warming potential (GWP) of CA (considering soil C sequestration, GHG emissions, fuel use, and fertilizer and seeds production) was -7729 kg CO2 ha(-1) y(-1) in 2008-2009 and -7892 kg CO2 ha(-1) y(-1) in 2010-2011, whereas that of CT was 1327 and 1156 kg CO2 ha(-1) y(-1). It was found that the contribution of CA to GWP was small compared to that of CT. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
  • Authors:
    • Marsch, R.
    • Luna-Guido, M.
    • Verhulst, N.
    • Patino-Zuniga, L.
    • Dendooven, L.
    • Govaerts, B.
  • Source: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
  • Volume: 152
  • Issue: May
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: Conservation agriculture based on (1) minimal soil movement, (2) retention of rational amounts of crop residue, (3) economically viable crop rotations restores soil fertility. Conservation agriculture improves soil characteristics, but it remains to be seen how zero tillage (ZT) affected greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and the global warming potential (GWP) compared to conventional tillage (Cr) when crop residue was kept or removed in a maize-wheat crop rotation since 1991. The soil organic C content in the 0-60 cm layer was larger in ZT (117.7 Mg C ha(-1)) compared to CT (76.8 Mg C ha(-1)) when residue was retained, but similar when it was removed. Tillage and residue management had only a small effect on GWP of the GHG emissions. However, the C sequestered in the 0-60cm was affected by tillage and crop residue management, resulting in a negative net GWP for ZT with crop residue retention (-6.277 Mg CO2 ha(-1) y(-1)) whereas in the other management practices it ranged from 1.288 to 1.885 Mg CO2 ha(-1) y(-1). It was found that cultivation technique had little effect on the GWP of the GHG, but had a large effect on C sequestered in the 0-60cm layer and the net GWP. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
  • Authors:
    • Yang, C.
    • Wang, H.
    • Lemke, R. L.
    • Zentner, R. P.
    • Campbell, C. A.
    • Liang, C.
    • Gan, Y.
  • Source: European Journal of Agronomy
  • Volume: 43
  • Issue: November
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: Growing interest in environmental quality has provided a strong incentive to examine how farming practices affect agricultural products' carbon footprints (CF), an environmental quality indicator. This study determined (i) the CF of spring wheat (Triticurn aestivum L.) grown in different cropping systems over 25 years, and (ii) the effect of soil organic carbon (SOC) changes over years on wheat CF. Wheat was grown in four cropping systems: (a) fallow-wheat (FW), (b) fallow-wheat-wheat (FWW), (c) fallow-wheat-wheat-wheat-wheat-wheat (FWWWWW), and (d) continuous wheat (ContW), in replicated field plots in Saskatchewan, Canada. Wheat CF was calculated at a system level with measured variables coupled with modeling approaches. Over the 25-year period, the soil under the ContW system gained organic C of 1340 kg CO2 eq ha(-1) annually, or 38%. 55%, and 127% more than those gained in the FWWWWW, FWW, and FW systems, respectively. The SOC gain more than offset the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions occurred during wheat production, leading to negative emission values at -742 kg CO2 eq ha(-1) annually for ContW, and -459, -404, and -191 kg CO2 eq ha(-1) for FWWWWW, FWW, and FW systems, respectively. Wheat in the ContW system produced the highest grain yield and gained highest SOC over the years, leading to the smallest (more negative) CF value at -0.441 kg CO2 eq kg(-1) of grain, significantly lower than the CF values from the three other systems (-0.102 to -0.116 kg CO2 eq kg(-1) of grain). Without considering the SOC gain in the calculation, wheat CF averaged 0.343 kg CO2 eq kg(-1) of grain and which did not differ among cropping systems. Wheat is the largest agricultural commodity in Saskatchewan, and the way the crop is produced has significant impacts on environmental quality, reflected by its carbon footprint. Cropping systems with decreased fallow frequency was shown to significantly enhance soil carbon gains over the years, increase annualized crop yields, and effectively lower the carbon footprint of this important commodity. Crown Copyright (c) 2012 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
  • Authors:
    • Samar, S. M.
    • Shahabian, M.
    • Talaie, A.
    • Emdad, M. R.
  • Source: Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science
  • Volume: 58
  • Issue: 3
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: This work examines the effects of two deficit irrigation strategies, conventional deficit irrigation (DI) and partial root-zone drying (PRD), on mature navel orange trees. The study carried out during two consecutive years (2008 and 2009) in a semi-arid climate on a silty-clay-loam soil in the north of Iran. Both DI and PRD trees were irrigated at two levels, 75 and 50% (DI75, PRD75, DI50 and PRD50) of the full irrigation (FI). In DI, irrigation water was applied to both sides of the tree rows, similar to FI. In PRD, irrigation water was applied alternately to only one side, at each irrigation event. Results showed that DI treatments reduced fruit yield by ~30% compared with FI, but PRD treatments caused no reduction in fruit yield. No negative impact was detected in fruit quality after applying DI and PRD treatments. Shoot growth decreased in all DI and PRD treatments in both years. In DI, stomatal resistance was higher (50%) than in FI, but it was not significantly affected in PRD. The irrigation water use efficiency of PRD trees increased to nearly twice that of FI. According to these two years' results, we recommend PRD as an acceptable deficit irrigation strategy in the region.
  • Authors:
    • Soomro, B. A.
    • Markhand, G. S.
    • Soomro, M. H.
  • Source: Pakistan Journal of Botany
  • Volume: 44
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: The drought is one of the biggest abiotic stresses for crop production in arid and semi-arid agriculture. Thus it is a challenge for plant scientists to screen and develop the drought tolerant cotton lines. In this study, 31 cotton genotypes/cultivars were evaluated under two irrigation regimes i.e., seven irrigations (Control) and two irrigations (Stress), using split plot design with four replications. The crop growth, yield and some physiological parameters were studied. There were high inter-varietal differences for all the parameters under control as well as drought stress. Although all the varieties for all parameters were significantly affected by drought but however, CRIS-9, MARVI, CRIS-134, CRIS-126, CRIS-337, CRIS-355 and CRIS-377 maintained highest performance for all the parameters studied under high drought conditions.
  • Authors:
    • Diniz, A. A.
    • Oliveira, F. R. A. de
    • Rebouças, J. R. L.
    • Dias, N. da S.
    • Andrade Filho, J.
    • Sousa Neto, O. N.
    • da S. Dias, N.
    • de Oliveira, F. R. A.
  • Source: Revista Brasileira de Engenharia Agrícola e Ambiental
  • Volume: 16
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: An experiment was conducted at the Universidade Federal Rural do Semi-arid in Mossoro, RN with the aim of evaluating the behavior of cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum L. race latifolium Hatch) 8H cultivar, in terms of growth when irrigated with treated domestic sewage. The experimental design was in randomized blocks with split plots and in plots were tested dilutions of wastewater [25% - T1, 50% - T2, 75% - T3 and 100% of wastewater - T4 and supply water with mineral fertilizer - T5] in two soils of contrasting textures. Irrigation with wastewater significantly influenced the growth of cotton plants, the rate of emergence, the germination percentage, plant height, stem diameter and leaf area, growing linearly until an optimal dose, as the proportion of use of domestic effluent. The positive effect of the accumulation of nutrient in soil applied by fertigation on the variables studied is also highlighted. The irrigation with treated wastewater can offset conventional fertilization of cotton.
  • Authors:
    • Jarsjo, J.
    • Tornqvist, R.
  • Source: Water Resources Management
  • Volume: 26
  • Issue: 4
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: In many semi-arid and arid regions of the world, water saving strategies need to be implemented in the agricultural sector in order to increase the resilience to water scarcity. We investigate basin-scale hydrological impacts of possible irrigation technique improvements, considering extensive cotton fields in the Aral Sea drainage basin (ASDB), Central Asia. We use a distributed hydrologic model that combines basin-scale, calibrated discharge and evapotranspiration quantifications with experimental results of (on-farm) water application needs for different irrigation techniques. This allows for quantification of how return flows contribute to river discharge through coupled groundwater-surface water-systems at the basin scale, under different regional climatic conditions. Results show that an implementation of improved irrigation techniques can yield water savings that increase the discharge to the Aral Sea by between 1 and 6 km(3)/year. Such water savings could contribute to mitigation of the acute water scarcity in the lower ASDB. The basin-scale water savings are about 60% lower than corresponding on-farm reductions in irrigation water application, since water is re-used and, hence, return flows decrease when less water is applied. Spatial analysis of regional differences in climatic conditions shows that implementation of more efficient irrigation systems would result in much larger (up to a factor 4) water savings in the more arid downstream regions than in the colder, upstream mountainous regions.
  • Authors:
    • Zhang, S. B.
    • Gong, X. F.
    • Zhang, R. F.
    • Wang, X. X.
    • Xie, K. Y.
    • Mares,V.
    • Gavilan,C.
    • Posadas,A.
    • Quiroz,R.
  • Source: Scientia Horticulturae
  • Volume: 134
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: Two field experiments were conducted in two semi-arid areas in northern China to test the response of three potato varieties to supplemental irrigation. Conventional furrow irrigation was compared to the partial root-zone drying (PRD) irrigation system at different watering levels, with and without plastic mulching. Reducing the supplementary water to one half, under both soil-climate conditions tested, did not affect fresh tuber yield; whereas water use efficiency (WUE) was equally incremented by all the reduced water treatments. When this reduction in the amount of supplementary water was managed through the PRD system, the distribution of moisture in the soil seemed to be improved and the potential evaporation was decreased due to the reduced evaporative surface exposed by PRD. The results showed that application of irrigation water per unit area can be reduced relative to common practice in Inner Mongolia and Gansu, maintaining the tuber yields currently obtained by local farmers. A further reduction in the amount of supplemental water, without a substantial decrease in yield, might be feasible with the PRD technique but this may require a more sophisticated irrigation management; and further research to estimate the cost-benefit ratio of such sophistication is needed. Results also showed that under low precipitation and low water retention capacity, the use of plastic mulching and a potato variety selected for drought-prone environments can make the difference for maintaining a high yield while reducing the wasteful use of the water resources.
  • Authors:
    • Barbosa, A. L.
    • Sousa, L. N.
    • Silva, A. E. V. N.
    • Araujo, G. G. L. de A.
    • Pereira, L. G. R.
    • Menezes, D. R.
    • Barreto, V. N. S.
    • Costa, J. M. da S.
    • Moreira, R. F.
  • Source: Revista Brasileira de Saude e Producao Animal
  • Volume: 13
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2012
  • Summary: This work aimed to evaluate a utilization of the Salt brush ( Atriplex nummularia) irrigated with residue from desalination as an alternative to Caipira French chickens' fattening diet. Hundred twenty chickens (60 males and 60 females), 28 day old, were selected individually away and by body weight and were distributed in a complete randomized design with four treatments, five repetitions and six chickens by experimental unit. Experimental diets were isonutritious and formulated by cassava hay (CH), Atriplex hay (AH), corn grain and soybean meal. It was used four treatments: 0%, 35%, 65% and 100% with replacement of CH by the AH in the base feed. There was no significant difference amount the intake of dry matter, crude protein and gross energy in relation to the replacement of CH by the AH who presents media of 133.9 g/chicken/day, 19.8 g/chicken/day and 543.3 Kcal/chicken/day respectively. The feed gain ratio of the diets tested had linearly increased. With a 17.7% replacement of CH by AH can be obtained maximum gains of 432.4 g and 14.4 g/day, respectively for total and daily average gain. The replacement of CH by the AH in the range from 46.4 to 50% showed better results for carcass weight and economic value in diets.