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Water Scarcity and Water Stress in Agriculture (CROSBI ID 49280)

Prilog u knjizi | izvorni znanstveni rad

Ondrasek, Gabrijel Water Scarcity and Water Stress in Agriculture // Physiological Mechanisms and Adaptation Strategies in Plants Under Changing Environment. Vol. 1 / Parvaiz Ahmad and Mohd Rafiq Wani (ur.). New York (NY): Springer, 2014. str. 75-96

Podaci o odgovornosti

Ondrasek, Gabrijel

engleski

Water Scarcity and Water Stress in Agriculture

In the present era of human population growth and climate changes, water scarcity (insufficient hydro-resources with appropriate quality for long-term food and energy production) are recognised as the key environmental issue. In European countries, water scarcity has already affected a significant portion of the territory (>10%) and population (>14%). The most recent projections are that ~40% of the world’s population would live in regions affected by water scarcity in the next ten years. Agriculture, especially production of irrigated crops food/feed, is a predominant water “consumer” given that ~70% (~3 trillion m3) of totally abstracted fresh hydro-resources are exploited by agri-sector, and that irrigated agriculture produces ~40% (~1.6 billion tonnes) of globally food supply. In agriculture, water scarcity is often equalised with drought, i.e. water stress. However, while drought (agronomic, hydrological or meteorological) implies a temporary decrease in water availability (due to precipitation deficiency and/or reduced groundwater/soil moisture), water scarcity from an agricultural perspective assumes that consumption of finite fresh hydro-resources exceed their sustainable exploitation for food production, and thus appropriate long-term water/land management strategies (e.g. implementation of modern irrigation systems) are needed. Unfortunately, recent report indicated that the amount of food wasted annually due to inadequate (post)harvesting processes and relatively high-quality consumer/market standards (~2 billion tonnes) exceeds the annual food production in irrigated agriculture. Therefore, certain solutions to water and food crisis need not to be based on relatively expensive agricultural intensification (increasing land or water productivity), but can rather be based on 1) improved food storage/transport capacities (notably in low-income countries) and 2) changed market-consumer relations (principally in high-income countries).

water stress, water scarcity, water management, crops, food/feed production

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Podaci o prilogu

75-96.

objavljeno

Podaci o knjizi

Physiological Mechanisms and Adaptation Strategies in Plants Under Changing Environment. Vol. 1

Parvaiz Ahmad and Mohd Rafiq Wani

New York (NY): Springer

2014.

978-1-4614-8590-2

Povezanost rada

Poljoprivreda (agronomija)