Ecological Bulletins, Ecological Implications of Contemporary Agriculture
Description
- the soil and its life;
- the plants, especially the unwanted ones;
- the fauna, with emphasis on the control of pests;
- the nutrient cycles and nutrient budgets (the driving force);
- the connecting elements in the rural landscape, related as they are with lotting out.
For each subject (session) two invited papers were presented in combination with a varying number of posters. All these papers were encompassed by the opening and closing lectures, which sketch the societal framework within which a more ecological approach of agriculture has to be worked out.
In this overview the different elements are rearranged and assessed according to four major groups of problems: lotting out, nutrient management, soil treatment, and weed and arthropod control. It is concluded with some comments on the possibilities to realize more ecological approaches in the framework of farming-practice and EC-politics.
Preface.Opening lecture: The limits to agriculture.
The substrate: how are we treating the soil?.
When is a plant a weed?.
The increasing need for ecological knowledge in pest control.
Flow of water and nutrients through agro-ecosystems.
Relations between ecosystems in the rural landscape.
Closing lecture
H. Eijsackers and A. Quispel are the authors of Ecological Bulletins, Bulletin 39, Ecological Implications of Contemporary Agriculture: Proceedings of a Symposium held 7-12 September, 1986, at Wageningen, published by Wiley.
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9788716102270
BINDING:
Hardback
BISAC:
Science
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 197.60(W) x Dimensions: 271.80(H) x Dimensions: 17.80(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English