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Informal settlements’ needs and environmental conservation in Mexico City: An unsolved challenge for land-use policy

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2011

The aim of this article is to analyze the effectiveness of land-use policy in Mexico City in controlling the expansion of informal human settlements in peri-urban zones of high ecological value. It is argued that Mexico City's land-use policy has been reactive and internally inconsistent, failing to take informal settlements into account, has not offered the poor access to housing with adequate services and greater security in terms of land tenure, and lacks the necessary financial resources and institutional capabilities for providing solutions to these problems.

LAND MANAGEMENT IN AGRICULTURAL AREAS AS BASIS FOR THE REVIVAL OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC POTENTIAL OF MODERN RUSSIA

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2015
Russia
Australia
New Zealand
Canada
Japan

In article is devoted to problems of land relations in agriculture, which provides an analysis of the nature this dynamics in recent decades, assess the rationality of land use in the context of globalization and offers an innovative solution for forming a model of land relations in agriculture. The authors is a traced the cyclic processes in the history of the development of land and property relations, assesses the present stage of the next cycle and are historical parallels in socio-economic development.

Microscale evidence for a high decrease of soil bacterial density and diversity by cropping

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2014

Soil microbes play major agricultural functions such as the transformation of soil organic matter into plant fertilizers. The effects of agricultural practices on soil microbes at the scale of plots, from meters to hectare, are well documented. However, the impact at soil microscale, from micrometers to millimeters, is much less known. Therefore, we studied bacterial community density and diversity at microscale in crop soil under grassland, tillage, and no tillage.

foxtail (Setaria) species-group

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2003

The weedy Setaria species (giant, green, yellow, knotroot, and bristly foxtail) compose one of the worst weed groups interfering with world agriculture and in other disturbed and managed habitats. These species, together with their crop counterparts (foxtail millet, korali), form the foxtail species-group (spp.-gp). Five successive waves of Setaria spp. invasion from preagricultural times to the present have resulted in widespread infestation of the disturbed, arable, temperate regions of the earth. These invasions have resulted in considerable economic and environmental costs.

Ecological agriculture in light of conception realization of sustainable development

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2008
Poland

Agricultural production is based on environmental natural resources, that is soil, water, air and the whole landscape with its biodiversity. The using with resources of soil should therefore be balanced which would combine the tasks of farmhold utilizing from both economical, social and environmental protection point of views. Principles these be realized in special means by ecological agriculture as sustainable system of food production.

Appraising and selecting conservation measures to mitigate desertification and land degradation based on stakeholder participation and global best practices

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009

Most desertification research focuses on degradation assessments without putting sufficient emphasis on prevention and mitigation strategies, although the concept of sustainable land management (SLM) is increasingly being acknowledged. A variety of already applied conservation measures exist at the local level, but they are not adequately recognised, evaluated and shared, either by land users, technicians, researchers, or policy makers. Likewise, collaboration between research and implementation is often insufficient.

Farmers' perception of environmental degradation and their adoption of improved management practices in Alxa, China

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009
China

The environment and the natural resource base have been severely degraded in Alxa League, western Inner Mongolia, China, over the past half-century. This study reports surveys that reveal farmers' perceptions of environmental degradation and their adoption of improved management practices in this poor and remote desert region. Surveys were made in villages that had been engaged in a large environmental rehabilitation and management project [Alxa League environmental rehabilitation and management project (ALERMP)] and those that had not.

Limitations to Postfire Seedling Establishment: The Role of Seeding Technology, Water Availability, and Invasive Plant Abundance

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2010

Seeding rangeland following wildfire is a central tool managers use to stabilize soils and inhibit the spread of invasive plants. Rates of successful seeding on arid rangeland, however, are low. The objective of this study was to determine the degree to which water availability, invasive plant abundance, and seeding technology influence postfire seedling establishment. Across four fire complexes, whole plots were either seeded using a rangeland drill, seeded by hand where seeds could be placed at an exact depth, or left as unseeded controls.