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         Agriculture:     more books (100)
  1. Agriculture for beginners by Charles William Burkett, Frank Lincoln Stevens, et all 2010-09-09
  2. Farmers of Forty Centuries; Or, Permanent Agriculture in China, Korea and Japan by Franklin Hiram King, 2010-04-22
  3. The Resisted Revolution: Urban America and the Industrialization of Agriculture, 1900-1930 by David B. Danbom, 1979-06-30
  4. Risk Management for Agriculture by Lowell B. Catlett, James D Libbin, 2006-06-06
  5. Safety and Health for Production Agriculture by Dennis J. Murphy, 1992-09
  6. Warfare and Agriculture in Classical Greece, Revised edition (Biblioteca Di Studi Antichi, 40) by Victor Davis Hanson, 1998-10-20
  7. Women in Agriculture in the Middle East (Perspectives on Rural Policy and Planning)
  8. Agriculture in Developing Countries by Keijiro Otsuka, 2008-06-11
  9. Prehistoric Agriculture. by Stuart, Comp. Struever, 1971-07
  10. Dryland Agriculture, Second Edition by G.A. Peterson, P.W. Unger, et all 2006-01-01
  11. Women in Agriculture by Raj Mohini Sethi, 1992-05
  12. Working Together: Gender Analysis in Agriculture (Library of Management for Development)
  13. Women, Land and Agriculture (Oxfam Focus on Gender Series)
  14. Methods of Teaching Agriculture (3rd Edition) by L. H. Newcomb, J. David McCracken, et all 2003-06-29

101. PAULOWNIA SURFBOARDS, WOODEN SURFBOARDS, PAULOWNIA
This project aims to turn 4 acres of unused agricultural land in France into a sustainable Paulownia plantation.
http://www.paulownia.co.uk

102. Suman Sahai Blog
Articles on agricultural themes, climate change, food security, gene patents, IPR and GM issues, from an Indian perspective.
http://sumansahai-blog.blogspot.com/
Suman Sahai Blog
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Hot, dry, hungry
Suman Sahai
There is a broad consensus that tropical areas are slated to see an expansion of arid zones. This will be accompanied by a contraction of 31-51 million ha of favourable cultivation areas and a significant reduction in food production in the most vulnerable areas where population density is high and food already scarce. Nearly one billion affected people live in these vulnerable environments, dependent on agriculture. These vulnerable populations have limited capacity to protect themselves from the environmental hazards that will accompany climate change, like drought and floods, and will suffer most from land degradation and biodiversity loss.
The Polluter gets Paid
According to estimates, a little less than half the production potential in certain developing countries could be lost. In South Asia, the biggest blow to food production is expected to come from the loss of multiple cropping zones. The worst affected areas are predicted to be the double and triple cropping areas like Punjab, Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh from where the surplus grain for our buffer stock comes. This means areas where two to three crops are produced in a year and which are predicted to turn into single crop zones, where only one crop can be taken in a year because the rest of the season will be too hot and dry for cultivation.
Coping with wheat loss
For South Asia, particularly India, one of the most serious impacts is anticipated in wheat production. Wheat is the single largest winter crop of north India and states like Punjab, Haryana, Western Uttar Pradesh produce the surplus wheat that goes into the PDS. Wheat is a particularly temperature sensitive crop and it has been estimated that for every one degree rise in temperature, wheat producing areas in India and South Asia will lose about four to five million tonnes of production. This will have a cascading effect on food for the poor.

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