The Long-Term Fertilization Experiments in Halle (Saale)
A Tool for Sustainable and Environmentally Compatible Land Management - Contributions of Plant Nutrition Science in Halle 13
(Sprache: Englisch)
The soils of our planet in enabling and sustaining plant growth provide the basis of human existence, as about 98 % of all foodstuff is primarily produced by t- restrial ecosystems. As a consequence of erosion, desertification, and the dev- opment of...
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Klappentext zu „The Long-Term Fertilization Experiments in Halle (Saale) “
The soils of our planet in enabling and sustaining plant growth provide the basis of human existence, as about 98 % of all foodstuff is primarily produced by t- restrial ecosystems. As a consequence of erosion, desertification, and the dev- opment of buildings, roads, industrial estates, etc, the utilizable soil surface area of the world is now decreasing by about 10 million ha annually, a loss which is occurring concurrently with a rapid increase of world population which is - pected to reach 8. 5 billion people by the year 2020. A diminishing soil area has thus to satisfy an ever increasing population. The human race is therefore faced with the major challenge of ensuring substantial and rising increases in plant production per unit land area worldwide, but with lower resource inputs and the need for long-term preservation of soil fertility under uncertain and possibly strongly changing climatic conditions on a global scale. Scientifically sound recommendations for agricultural and environmental policies are expected from research work. These require well-founded knowledge about the reaction of soils and agroecosystems towards different cultivation and fertilization practices as well as towards climatic factors. Such knowledge can only be obtained by long-term investigations, as the effects of human activity as well as of non-anthropogenic factors occur very gradually because of the buffer capacity of the ecosystems, and they are often quantifiable only in the fullness of time.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „The Long-Term Fertilization Experiments in Halle (Saale) “
- Site and surroundings: the Julius-Khn-Field in Halle- The long-term fertilization trials at the Julius-Khn-Field in Halle
- The soil development trial founded in 1948
- Final remarks and approaches for the continuation of the long-term experiments in Halle
- Publications about the long-term fertilization trials in Halle
Autoren-Porträt von Annette Deubel, Wolfgang Merbach
Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Merbach lehrte bis 2006 Pflanzenernährung und war von 2000 - 2003 Dekan an der Landwirtschaftlichen Fakultät der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg. Hauptarbeitsgebiete: Ökophysiologie der Rhizosphäre, symbiontische Stickstoffbindung, nachhaltige Landnutzung, N-Umsatz in Ökosystemen, klimarelevante Spurengase (Lachgas). Dr. Annette Deubel promovierte auf dem Gebiet der Pflanzenernährung und beschäftigte sich schwerpunktmäßig mit Fragen der P - Dynamik im Boden, P - mobilisierenden Mikroorganismen und organischen Wurzelausscheidungen von Pflanzen.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autoren: Annette Deubel , Wolfgang Merbach
- 2007, 2nd ed. 2007, VIII, 191 Seiten, Maße: 14,8 x 21 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Vieweg+Teubner
- ISBN-10: 3835040006
- ISBN-13: 9783835040007
- Erscheinungsdatum: 26.07.2007
Sprache:
Englisch
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