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Protocols in ecological and environmental plant physiology

 

Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 61(7)

Agronomy looking forward, thinking broadly

I. J. Titmarsh A C, J. Doughton A, E. Woods B

A Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation, PO Box 102, Toowoomba, Qld 4350, Australia.
B Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation, GPO Box 46, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: ian.titmarsh@bluemaxx.com.au
 
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Abstract

Global trends in human population and agriculture dictate that future calls made on the resources (physical, human, financial) and systems involved in producing food will be increasingly more demanding and complex. Both plant breeding and improved agronomy lift the potential yield of crops, a key component in progressing farm yield, so society can reasonably expect both agronomy as a science and agronomists as practitioners to contribute to the successful delivery of necessary change. By reflecting on current trends in agricultural production (diversification, intensification, integration, industrialisation, automation) and deconstructing a futuristic scenario of attempting agricultural production on Mars, it seems the skills agronomists will require involve not only the mandatory elements of their discipline but also additional skills that enable engagement with, even leadership of, teams who integrate (in sum or part) engineering, (agri-)business, economics and operational management, and build the social capital required to create and maintain a diverse array of enhanced and new ethical production systems and achieve increasing efficiencies within them.

   
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