CA-CoP CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE
for sustainable production intensification
Amir Kassam
Moderator
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
URL: www.fao.org/ag/ca
Dear colleagues,
As we suspect the topic area would be of interest to you, we are pleased to invite you to contribute a paper to a special edition of AIMS Agriculture and Food journal on the topic of “Sustainable Crop Production Intensification“.
This special edition is edited by Prof. Michele Pisante [log in to unmask], chair of the Agronomy and crop sciences research and education center, University of Teramo.
AIMS Agriculture and Food is a brand new international Open Access journal devoted to publishing high-quality, peer-reviewed original papers representing complete studies in the multidisciplinary field of Agriculture and Food. We wish to provide a new platform for researchers to communicate their scientific ideas in the field.
This special edition will be published with the Open Access publication policy. All the article processing charges for authors are waived.
Please see the introduction to the topic:
The concept of Sustainable Agriculture needs to be revisited in the context of the need to increase productivity to meet the food and agricultural demands of the future total projected population of some 10 billion by the end of the 21st century. It is obvious that the concept of Sustainable Agriculture must recognize that agricultural ecosystems are sustainable in the long-term only if the outputs of all components produced balance the natural and synthetic inputs into the production systems. Whether the required amount of input (e.g. nutrients) to obtain a desired yield is supplied in organic or biological form rather than in mineral form is a matter of preference, availability, economics and logistics. Plants cannot differentiate the nutrients supplied through the organic or biological or synthetic sources but the yield response functions, nutrient retention and release rates, and efficiency of nutrient utilization are affected by the way the combined nutrient sources are managed and whether production paradigm is based on conventional tillage agriculture or no-till Conservation Agriculture. In either case, the important question is the need to establish the supply of nutrients in effective forms, in adequate, quantities, at right times and correct locations to support the production of the desired amount of food and other agricultural products to meet the needs of 10 billion people by the end of the century.
With the publication of Save and Grow in 2011, FAO proposed a new paradigm of sustainable crop production intensification, one that is both highly productive and environmentally sustainable, and at the same time efficient and resilient, and capable of delivering ecosystem services such as clean and regulated fresh water supplies, carbon sequestration, control of soil degradation and erosion, and enhancement of agrobiodiversity. FAO recognized that, over the past half-century, agriculture based on the intensive use of mechanical tillage and agrochemical inputs has increased global food production and average per capita food consumption. However, in the process of this tillage-based intensification, there has been a severe depletion of natural resources of many agro-ecosystems, jeopardizing future crop productivity and agro-ecological potentials, and has added to the emissions of green house gases responsible for global warming.
In light of the above, the concept of sustainable crop production intensification should be the primary strategic objective of innovative agricultural research and development strategies internationally for the coming decades. Already, a set of core agroecological principles for sustainable production (such as minimum soil disturbance, maintenance of soil cover, and diversified cropping system) and a range of locally formulated and often location-specific practical options exist for farming practices, approaches and technologies that can strengthen sustainability and at the same time intensify crop production in terms of increased output and productivity (efficiency). These principles and practices need to be applied and mainstreamed internationally in the coming decades.
In order to do this, a renewed attention on the results of innovative research and development initiatives to improve agricultural productivity growth on a sustainable basis is needed. Additionally, intertwining challenges of climate change and competition for land, water and energy require attention in the following areas: bridging the agronomically attainable gap between actual and potential productivity levels in the agriculture of developing countries; investing in agricultural innovation and knowledge system development, broadly defined; and improving national and international research and development cooperation for sustainable agriculture growth and natural resource management.
The above brief presentation for this special edition of AIMS Agriculture and Food invites contributors to submit articles that address the topic of Sustainable Crop Production Intensification from all the above described points of view. The fields of interest include, but is not limited to, the (overlapping) disciplines of agronomists, biotechnologists, crop physiologists, soil scientists, and agroecologists who must also work with geologists, hydrologists, climatologists, computer scientists, system engineers, economists, with particular interest in the emerging multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary systems approach to research and development at multiple scales and levels of systems such as the farm, household, community, landscape, basin, sectors and cross-sectors, local, national and international.
Submission due date: 31 January 2016.
Visit our website for more information at: http://www.aimspress.com/newsinfo/441.html
Please feel free to distribute this letter within your organization and professional network to colleagues who might be interested for this publishing opportunity, if you do not have a paper to contribute or kindly would like to do so.
In case of any questions you have, please contact us.
Thank you so much for your kind consideration.
Looking forward to your feedback.
Kind regards,
Xiaowei Tang, Managing Editor
AIMS Agriculture and Food
Website: http://www.aimspress.com/journal/agriculture
Email: [log in to unmask]
On behalf of
Michele Pisante, Professor
Chair, Agronomy and crop sciences research and education center
University of Teramo
Via C.R. Lerici, 1
64023 Mosciano S.Angelo (TE), Italy
Phone & Fax: +39 0861 266940
http://www.unite.it/UniTE/Engine/RAServePG.php/P/58511UTE0413?&VRIC_IDOC=193#A2
Email: [log in to unmask]
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