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Farming Action: Catchment Reaction

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Farming Action: Catchment Reaction

The Effect of Dryland Farming on the Natural Environment

Edited by:
J Williams   CSIRO Land and Water
RA Hook  
HL Gascoigne  

Illustrations
440 pages
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING


Our eBooks are available from eBooks.com and other retailers

 

 Dryland farming is a major export earner for many temperate-zone countries, yet it continues to degrade a country's natural resources. Effects are not restricted to the land - changes in water quality can reduce the potential uses of water and bring about catastrophic changes in both freshwater and coastal ecosystems.

Farming Action: Catchment Reaction provides a comprehensive technical overview of the relationships between dryland farming systems and catchment land and water quality in Australia, and integrates it in a whole system framework. It deals with the issues in terms of people, pointers, processes and prediction as it discusses social aspects of developing and implementing research to improve dryland farming systems in catchment management programs, indicators of catchment health, and the processes which determine the impact of the farming action on the catchment response. It concludes by considering the adequacy of our ability to use this process knowledge in models to predict the effect of dryland farming on catchment condition.
 

 
  • Examines problems from a variety of perspectives - those of farmers, consultants and scientists
  • Provides a comprehensive overview of modelling theory
  • Provides indicators enabling both professionals and communities to measure the impact of dryland farming
  • Brings together the latest international results
  • Applicable to all countries using dryland farming techniques.
 

 
  1. Introduction: perspectives on the problem
  2. People: client needs and user involvement - a summary
  3. Integrated catchment management - where is it at?
  4. Dryland farming systems for catchment care: natural resource accounting
  5. Dryland farming and catchment care: regional policy in a mathematical programming framework
  6. Technical issues in understanding processes (researching) across scale
  7. Community participation in CSIRO's Dryland Farming Systems program
  8. Managing institutional collaboration in catchment systems research
  9. Evaluation of science-based research and development: a review in the context of integrated catchment management
  10. Strategies for achieving adoption of new technology or alternative management practices
  11. Market research
  12. Environmental indicators of catchment and farm health
  13. Landscape and function - the fundamental causes of land and water degradation
  14. Dryland farming regions and systems of Australia
  15. Land degradation processes and water quality effects: decline in soil structure
  16. Land degradation processes and water quality effects: soil acidification
  17. Land degradation processes and water quality effects: waterlogging and salinisation
  18. Land degradation processes and water quality effects: organic matter, soil and nutrient loss, and chemical residues
  19. Dryland farming, erosion and stream sediments - the problem of catchment scale
  20. The relationship between remnant vegetation and other land resources in dryland agricultural systems
 

 This book is a valuable resource for rural community groups and the technical teams supporting them; organisations and individuals involved in policy and management aspects of catchment care; those involved in agricultural or environmental courses; as well as the scientific community. 

Related Titles
 Your Own Forest    Plant Reintroduction in a Changing Climate    Photography for Field Work    Land Use Intensification    Reducing the Impacts of Development on Wildlife    Grasses of Coastal NSW    Australian Grasses  

  
 


 
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