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There are 191 content items of different types and languages related to aptidão da terra on the Land Portal.

aptidão da terra

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Réforme agraire: Colonisation et coopératives agricoles 2000/1

Journal Articles & Books
Novembro, 2001
Moçambique
Filipinas
Itália

Issues relating to land and land reform have been moving up the agenda of rural poverty and food security in recent years with the increasing acceptance that the prerequisites for broad-based and equitable development include the essential need for people to have access to land and other natural resources. Access needs to be on an equitable basis allowing the poor and the disadvantaged, including women, to secure the assets needed for them and their families to generate sustainable livelihoods.

Land Evaluation in Europe

Journal Articles & Books
Novembro, 1976
Bélgica
Europa

This bulletin gives an overview of the ninth session of the working party on Soil Classification and Survey of the European Commission on Agriculture that took place in Ghent, Belgium, in september 1973. It presents the papers, discussions and recommendations developed during the meeting. A methodology of land evaluation is being developed in FAO and will be used for the interpretation of the FAO/UNESCO Soil Map of the World with a view to making a global evaluation of the land resources available for agricultural development.

Guidelines: land evaluation for extensive grazing

Journal Articles & Books
Novembro, 1991
França
Zâmbia
Afeganistão
Zimbabwe
Austrália
Grécia
Guiné
Etiópia
Paquistão
Colômbia
Panamá
Quênia
Jordânia
Filipinas
Líbia
Itália
Botswana
Países Baixos
Argentina
Sudão
Europa
Ásia
África
América do Norte

Extensive grazing is the predominant form of land use on at least a quarter of the world’s land surface, in which livestock are raised on food that comes mainly from rangelands. Extensive grazing differs from crop or forestry production, in which the produce remains in situ whilst growing. Evaluation for extensive grazing, unlike that for cropping or forestry, must take into account the production of both grazing forage, termed primary production, and the livestock that feed on this forage, termed secondary production.