The rise in global temperature owing to climate change will affect agriculture in strikingly different ways in the lower and higher latitudes. While in temperate latitudes a rise in temperature will help developed countries increase food productivity, it will have adverse effects in India and other countries in the tropics. The summer monsoon, which accounts for nearly 75 per cent of India’s rainfall, is critical for agriculture. Climate change is likely to intensify the variability of summer monsoon dynamics, leading to a rise in extreme events such as increased precipitation and heightened flood risks in some parts of the country and reduced rainfall and prolonged drought in other areas. A World Bank report on climate change impact based on case studies in India has focussed on drought-prone regions of Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, and flood-prone districts in Orissa on the edge of climate tolerance limits. It highlights the possibility of the yields of major dry land crops declining in Andhra Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers of Maharashtra may see yields go down by as much as 30 per cent. Rice production in Orissa will face a similar fate with yields in the flood-prone coastal regions dropping by12 per cent.
Poor and marginal farmers who own less than one acre of land mostly populate these regions. There is an urgent need to evolve comprehensive climate resilience strategies that must factor in risk assessment, better water management, developing varieties that can do well in stressful conditions, and bringing about certain changes in agricultural practices. Many organisations are already working to develop drought-resistant and saline-resistant crop varieties for the arid regions, and rainfall-tolerant and short-duration varieties for flood-prone regions. But greater and sustained government support for agricultural research will be vital. At the same time, the government must persuade farmers to take better advantage of the dry rabi season in the flood-prone regions, and also help them supplement their income through non-farm activities such as aquaculture. It may take many years for the devastating effects of climate change on agriculture to be felt fully but the time for bold government and public action is now.
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Check out:
The Rhizosphere: An Ecological PerspectiveEdited by Zoe G. Cardon and Julie L. Whitbeck
Hardbound, 232 Pages
Published: MAR-2007
ISBN 10: 0-12-088775-4
ISBN 13: 978-0-12-088775-0
Imprint: ACADEMIC PRESS
"As agriculture has evolved, the degree of intervention has grown steadily, culminating with the current,
resource-intensive "Green Revolution" production systems where management interventions are often the dominant force shaping agroecosystem structure and function." --p.128
"The
unintended consequences of agriculture extend well beyond agricultural landscapes and
include environmental degradation and social displacement." --p.127
"The effect of cultivation on microbial community structure in bulk soil appear to be
long-lasting and can still be detected years after agricultural mangement has ended." --p.132
"Many have advocated the adoption of an ecosystem-based approach that would incorporate multifunctionality as an agricultural goal and entail
broad application of fundamental ecological principles to food production." --p.127
"We recognize that ultimately the transition to ecologically sound, sustainable food production systems that meet human needs will be complex and
will require fundamental changes in cultural values and human societies as well as the application of ecolgical knowledge to agricultural management." --p.148
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Finally, the scientific community is writing about this. New paradigms are placing soil as a significant player in the climate.
Humus is key, and it is not as inert as the old paradigms suggested. "Larding the Lean Earth" shows how history has been driven by this lack of understanding.
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Larding the Lean Earth: Soil and Society in Nineteenth Century America...those were the "formative" years....===
We need to reevaluate eco-management, in light of this new eco-knowledge.~