Perspectives for Agronomy: Adopting Ecological Principles and Managing Resource UseM.K. van Ittersum, S.C. van de Geijn Elsevier, 1997 M12 11 - 363 pages During the 4th ESA-Congress, held in the Netherlands, 7-11 July 1996, a new perspective for agronomy emerged. Various contributions demonstrate the need for a new role of agronomy and its tools. In recent decades, agriculture has evolved from an activity with mainly productivity aims, into an issue conciliating environmental, agricultural, and economic and social objectives. Placing agriculture in such a broadened perspective requires a different agronomy, with new tools and approaches at a range of aggregration levels. It calls for detailed knowledge concerning the functioning, productivity and ecological relationships of agricultural plants and crops. In addition, it calls for a constant update and synthesis of existing and newly generated knowledge, the design of new ideotypes and genotypes, new production technologies, cropping systems, farming systems and agro-ecological land use systems. This proceedings book presents a set of case studies illustrating the various agronomic tools that can be used for specific agronomic questions. The case studies are grouped in sections illustrating relevant subquestions in developing an agriculture with broadened objectives. The book starts with an introductory paper on the role of agronomy in research and education in Europe. The second section deals with agricultural land use, food security and environment. This is followed by a set of papers describing experimental research and modeling approaches used to design new ideotypes of crops, including physiological properties in relation to growth factors such as radiation, CO2, temperature and water. Sustained soil fertility directly links to nutrient cycling and soil organic matter. A selected set of papers addresses the improvements in resource use efficiency and as such their contribution towards economic, environmental and agricultural objectives. The final section addresses the design of integrated and ecological arable farming systems. It highlights the role of prototyping interaction with leading-edge farmers, as promising tools to design, implement and test new farming systems. It is hoped that the activities of the European Society for Agronomy and the Proceedings of its 4th Congress will stimulate to serve the new perspectives of agronomy, i.e. to adopt ecological principles, to optimally manage the use of resources and to meet social and economic objectives. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 68
... treatments differing in GWT, grazing/mowing regime and N fertilisation regime were spatially integrated, and that CO2 emitted by cattle was largely included in the measurements. Besides the CO2 fluxes air temperature (T) and global ...
... treatments at drained peat pasture soils in Zegveld, The Netherlands, and annual contribution to the enhanced ... treatments. Higher fluxes in the grazed treatments may have resulted from the stimulation of N2O production by cattle ...
... treatment. This was probably associated with (i) the lower N fertilisation rate, 80 kg N/ha per year, and (ii) the ... treatments at Zegveld were obtained. The method for monitoring CO2 implied that relatively large areas were sampled ...
... treatment gave concentrations in the tunnel between 630 and 770 umol mol" for 60%, 86%, 78% and 94% of the duration ... treatments and whether or not there was any interaction between the effects of [CO2] and temperature. 3. Results 3.1 ...
... treatments. Mean insolation was similar during reproductive development, with a 4-year mean of 16.6 MJ m” per day (Table 3), but varied substantially between years during vegetative development from 2.9 (1993/1994) to 7.4 MJ m” per day ...
Contents
17 | |
65 | |
Section 4 MANAGING RESOURCE USE | 169 |
Section 5 DESIGNING FARMING SYSTEMS | 291 |
Author Index | 361 |
Subject index | 363 |