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Combating Desertification With Plants 2001 Edition at Meripustak

Combating Desertification With Plants 2001 Edition by D. Pasternak Arnold Schlissel , Springer

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)D. Pasternak Arnold Schlissel
    PublisherSpringer
    ISBN9780306466328
    Pages462
    BindingHardback
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearOctober 2001

    Description

    Springer Combating Desertification With Plants 2001 Edition by D. Pasternak Arnold Schlissel

    The conference "Combating Desertification with Plants" was held in Beer Sheva Israel from November 2-5 1999 and was attended by 70 participants from 30 countries and/or international organisations. Desertification - the degradation of soils in drylands - is a phenomenon occurring in scores of countries around the globe. The number of people (in semiarid regions) affected by the steady decline in the productivity of their lands is in the hundred millions. The measures required to halt and reverse the process of desertification fall into many categories - policy institutional sociological-anthropological and technical. Although technical "solutions" are not currently in vogue the conference organizers felt that perhaps the pendulum had swung too far in the direction of "participatory approaches." Hence IPALAC - The International Program for Arid Land Crops - whose function is to serve as a catalyst for optimizing the contribution of plant germplasm to sustainable development in desertification-prone regions - felt the time was opportune for providing a platform for projects where the "plant-driven" approach to development finds expression. Some 45 papers were delivered at the conference falling into the categories of this volume: Overview Potential Germplasm for Arid Lands Introduction Domestication and Dissemination of Arid Land Plants Land Rehabilitation and Mechanisms of Plant Transfer. The conference was funded by UNESCO (Division of Ecological Sciences) the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Finland and MASHAV Israel's Center for International Development Cooperation. Table of contents : Introduction. 1. Some Observations Relating to the Global Agricultural Situation; Y. Abt. 2. Combating Poverty with Plants; D. Pasternak. Part I: Potential Germplasm for Arid Lands. 3. The Role of Horticulture Plants in Combating Desertification; T.A. Mtaita et al. 4. Terfezias a Family of Mycorrhizal Edible Mushrooms for Arid Zones; V. Kagan-Zur. 5. The Role and Potential of Traditional Tuber Crops in Malawi; M.F.A. Maliro. 6. Honeybees and Nectariferous Plants in the Desert are an Important Factor to Sustain Modern Agriculture; D. Eisikowitch. 7. Importance of Non-Wood Forest Product as Source of Rural Women's Income in Western Burkina Faso; N. Lamien G. Vognan. 8. Ethnobotany and Importance of Three Local Species in Northern Cameroon; J.M. Fondoun J. Onana. 9. Potentials of Non-Wood Forest Products of the Semiarid Regions of Uganda; J.P. Elokaokich. 10. Biodiversity Prospecting in Drylands of Latin America; B.N. Timmermann. 11. Provenance Trial for Indigenous Tree Species: Schinziophyton rautanenii schinz; L. Simwanda. Part II: Introduction Domestication and Dissemination of Arid Land Plants. 12. Introduction and Selection of Drought and Salt Tolerant Plants for Afforestation and Landscaping in Arid Lands; Y.B. Dov et al. 13. The Screening of Multipurpose Tree Species for Agroforestry Practices in the Semiarid Ecozone of Ghana; J. Cobbina. 14. Results of 50-years of Studies on Afforestation as related to the Problem of Desertification Control in Ciscaspian Lowland in Russia; M.L. Sizemskaya et al.15. Citrullus colocynthis an Israeli Desert Plant as a Potential Source of Edible Oil; D. Schafferman et al. 16. Euphorbia tirucalli for High Biomass Production; P.L.J. Van Damme. 17. Boraginaceae as Potential Sources of Gamma-Linolenic Acid; H.F. Rappoport et al. 18. Root Involvement in Plant Development and Productivity under Semiarid Conditions; A. Carmi. 19. Acacia mearnsii for Income Generation and Environmental Protection in Kenya; N.M. Onchere. 20. Potential of Australian Acacias for Human Food; T. Rinaudo. 21. The Effect of Shade on Initial Growth Development and Occurrences of Leaf Diseases in Wild Indigenous Fruit Trees; S.M. Mateke. 22. Afforestation of Semiarid Areas of Tanzania: Focusing on the Root Compartment; E. Munyanziza. 23. Introduction of Cacti as Vegetable Crops for Israel; A. Nerd et al. 24. Upscaling the Experimental Planting of Argania spinosa at Kibbutz Ketura Israel; E.M. Solowey. 25. Mungbean (Cigna radiata L.) a Choice Crop for Improvement of Human and Soil Health in Southern Africa; M.L. Chadha. 26. Many Problems and Some Solutions to the Commercialisation of NTFPs in Botswana; F.W. Taylor. 27. Fighting Desertification by Production and Use of Jatropha Oil; R.K. Henning. Part III: Land Rehabilitation. 28. Combating Desertification with Seabuckthorn; L. Rongsen. 29. Reversing Desertification with Tamarix in China; W. Liu M. Liu. 30. Bioreclamation of Saline Soils of the Western Coast of Senegal; M. Diatt



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