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Issuesland managementLandLibrary Resource
There are 8, 235 content items of different types and languages related to land management on the Land Portal.
Displaying 3397 - 3408 of 6712

Rapidly restoring biological soil crusts and ecosystem functions in a severely disturbed desert ecosystem

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2016

Restoring biological soil crusts (biocrusts) in degraded drylands can contribute to recovery of ecosystem functions that have global implications, including erosion resistance and nutrient cycling. To examine techniques for restoring biocrusts, we conducted a replicated, factorial experiment on recently abandoned road surfaces by applying biocrust inoculation (salvaged and stored dry for two years), salvaged topsoil, an abiotic soil amendment (wood shavings), and planting of a dominant perennial shrub (Ambrosia dumosa).

Evaluation of field wetlands for mitigation of diffuse pollution from agriculture: Sediment retention, cost and effectiveness

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2012

Diffuse pollution, and the contribution from agriculture in particular, has become increasingly important as pollution from point sources has been addressed by wastewater treatment. Land management approaches, such as construction of field wetlands, provide one group of mitigation options available to farmers. Although field wetlands are widely used for diffuse pollution control in temperate environments worldwide, there is a shortage of evidence for the effectiveness and viability of these mitigation options in the UK.

Assessing climate change impacts on the ecohydrology of the Jinghe River basin in the Loess Plateau, China

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013
China

Quantifying the impacts of climate change on the hydrology and ecosystem is important in the study of the Loess Plateau, China, which is well known for its high erosion rates and ecosystem sensitivity to global change. A distributed ecohydrological model was developed and applied in the Jinghe River basin of the Loess Plateau. This model couples the vegetation model, BIOME BioGeochemicalCycles (BIOME-BGC) and the distributed hydrological model, Water and Energy transfer Process in Large river basins (WEP-L).

Sustainable land management by restoration of short water cycles and prevention of irreversible matter losses from topsoils

Policy Papers & Briefs
September, 2009
Germany

Sustainable land management requires that water and matter (nutrients and base cations) are efficiently recycled within ecosystems so that irreversible losses of matter from topsoils are minimised. Matter losses are connected to water flow. The division of water into evapotranspiration that is loss-free, and seepage to groundwater or surface water flow that both carry material losses, is decisive in determining total losses of dissolved matter in a given catchment. Investigations of areal matter losses confirmed the instrumental role of vegetation cover.

Prospects of application of dynamic crop models in the problems of midterm and long-term planning of agricultural production and land management

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2015

Requirements for the infrastructure and functionality of dynamic models of the production process of agricultural plants, which are necessary for building computer systems to support long-term solutions in agriculture and land management, are described. The extent to which domestic and foreign developments meet these requirements is shown.

Analysis of foreign experience of state regulation of agricultural lands rotation

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2012
Belarus

In the conditions of the Republic of Belarus there was analysed the experience of state regulation of agricultural lands rotation in foreign countries. There were determined the key aspects of functioning of developed market of agricultural lands, which should be accounted and controlled by organs of state authority. There were systematized multiple forms and methods of state intervention into market rotation of lands. On this basis there was developed the purpose, tasks and methods of regulation of land rotation for the developing market of lands in the Republic of Belarus.

Response of guanacos Lama guanicoe to changes in land management in Península Valdés, Argentine Patagonia: conservation implications

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2012

The guanaco Lama guanicoe was the only large native herbivore widely distributed across Patagonia until the introduction of domestic sheep Ovis aries. Guanacos have declined because of competition with sheep for forage, high hunting pressure and habitat degradation. Península Valdés is a protected area where sheep ranching is the predominant activity. A ranch formerly dedicated to sheep production was converted into a private wildlife reserve, from which all the sheep were removed in 2005.

Methodology to Estimate the Future Extent of Dryland Salinity in the Southwest of Western Australia

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2010

In the southwestern agricultural region of Western Australia, the clearing of the original perennial vegetation for annual vegetation-based dryland agriculture has lead to rising saline groundwater levels. This has had effects such as reduced productivity of agricultural land, death of native vegetation, reduced stream water quality and infrastructure damage. These effects have been observed at many locations within the 18 million ha of cleared land.

Community perception of biodiversity conservation within protected areas in Benin

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2010
Benin

Commitment of local communities to protected areas is essential for conserving biodiversity. However, in many developing countries like Benin, former management strategies kept human from protected areas using coercion. Fortunately, more recent regimes attempt to give local populations more control on the management but little is known about local residents' perceptions, beliefs and attitudes toward the management of these areas.

Desertification and livestock grazing: The roles of sedentarization, mobility and rest

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2011

Pastoralism is an ancient form of self-provisioning that is still in wide use today throughout the world. While many pastoral regions are the focus of current desertification studies, the long history of sustainability evidenced by these cultures is of great interest. Numerous studies suggesting a general trend of desertification intimate degradation is a recent phenomenon principally attributable to changes in land tenure, management, and treatment.