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Fruit germplasm resources and demands for small scale farmers post-tsunami and conflicts in Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam province, Indonesia

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Indonésie

Civil conflicts and the December 2004 tsunami have impeded the development of local fruit germplasm despite the inherent high quality and potential of Aceh’s fruit germplasm. Most of Aceh communities are composed of small scale farmers with land ownership averaging from 0.25 to 4 ha per capita; they plant various trees species (fruits, rubber, cocoa, etc.) in a mixed-tree based system (agroforestry) with extensive management. In Aceh' village markets most fruit is produced by local farmers.

Wasted waste—Disappearing reuse at the peri-urban interface

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Inde
Ghana
Nigéria

Safe and sustainable management of waste presents a major challenge in cities in the Global South. For decades farmers in the peri-urban interface (PUI) have used biodegradable components of urban waste as inputs into their farming practices. Evidence from Kano, Nigeria; Kumasi, Ghana; Hubli-Dharwad and Kolkata, India reveals in rare detail how urban waste reuse plays an important role in the livelihood strategies of lower-income families nd while waste farming also contributes significantly to urban food security.

Land, power and peace: Tenure formalization, agricultural reform, and livelihood insecurity in rural Rwanda

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Rwanda

Land tenure and agricultural reforms are essential components of postwar development. The importance of land use and management systems to livelihood stability and economic growth is especially relevant in Rwanda, where eighty per cent of the population depends on subsistence agriculture in a rural system plagued by conflict over holdings and decreasing production.

Urban agriculture's enterprise potential: Exploring vegetable box schemes in Cape Town

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Afrique du Sud
Afrique australe

Urban agriculture is potentially an important element of land reform and economic development programmes in South Africa. The social value of urban agriculture, such as improving food security, developing a sense of community and promoting ecological conservation, is well documented. But in order to effectively contribute to development agendas, urban agriculture must also present viable, sustainable economic opportunities. This study sets forth vegetable box schemes as a context-appropriate, economically feasible urban agriculture enterprise for which there is growing consumer demand.

Agrobiodiversity for food security, health and income

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Afrique
Asie

By the year 2050, agriculture will have to provide the food and nutrition requirements of some 9 billion people. Moreover, to maintain that level of productivity indefinitely it must do so using environmentally sustainable production systems. This task will be profoundly complicated by the effects of climate change, increasing competition for water resources and loss of productive lands.

Soil degradation and food security coupled with global climate change in northeastern China

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Chine

The northeastern China is an important commodity grain region in China, as well as a notable corn belt and major soybean producing area. It thus plays a significant role in the national food security system. However, large-scale land reclamation and non-optimum farming practices give rise to soil degradation in the region. This study analyzed the food security issues coupled with global climate change in the northeastern China during 1980–2000, which is the period of modern agriculture.

meat of the global food crisis

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Chine

The global food crisis has been widely described in terms of the volatility of grain and oilseed markets and the associated worsening conditions of food security facing many poor people. Various explanations have been given for this volatility, including increasingly meat-centered diets and rising demand for animal feed, especially in China.

Projections of climate change impacts on potential C4 crop productivity over tropical regions

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Inde
Afrique

Climate change impacts on agriculture could arguably be most critical for developing countries in tropical regions: their populations rely importantly on agriculture and climate-dependant resources, poverty limits their capacity to anticipate and adapt to climate change, and population increase already poses a serious challenge to food security in those regions. Current projections of climate change impacts on tropical crop yields, even though on average negative, remain largely uncertain: there is need for more consistent, large-scale, quantitative assessments.

Benefits of wildlife-based land uses on private lands in Namibia and limitations affecting their development

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Namibie
Afrique

Legislative changes during the 1960s–1970s granted user rights over wildlife to landowners in southern Africa, resulting in a shift from livestock farming to wildlife-based land uses. Few comprehensive assessments of such land uses on private land in southern Africa have been conducted and the associated benefits are not always acknowledged by politicians. Nonetheless, wildlife-based land uses are growing in prevalence on private land. In Namibia wildlife-based land use occurs over c. 287,000 km².

Developing a complementary framework for urban ecology

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013

Cities are characterized by dynamic interactions between socio-economic and biophysical forces. Currently more than half of the global population reside in cities which influence the global biogeochemical cycles and climate change, substantially exacerbating pressures on urban pollution, water quality and food security, as well as operating costs for infrastructure development. Goods and services such as aesthetic values, water purification, nutrient recycling, and biological diversity, that urban ecosystems generate for the society, are critical to sustain.

Impacts of long-term soil and water conservation on agricultural productivity: The case of Anjenie watershed, Ethiopia

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013
Éthiopie
Afrique

Over the last three decades, many soil and water conservation projects have been implemented in various parts of eastern and southern Africa to control land degradation, and improve land productivity, especially under ‘catchment approach’ initiatives of the 1980s. In Ethiopia, many of these soil conservation projects were implemented following the severe drought of 1974.

productivity of traditional rice–fish co-culture can be increased without increasing nitrogen loss to the environment

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2013

Although the traditional rice–fish co-culture system (RF) efficiently uses water and land resources, provides food security, and does not harm the local environment, it requires improvement because of its small scale and low fish yield. We therefore determined whether fish yield in RF can be increased without increasing nitrogen (N) loss into the environment (i.e., the risk of N pollution) by management of N inputs.