Details
Originalsprache | Englisch |
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Titel des Sammelwerks | The Rural-Urban Interface |
Untertitel | An Interdisciplinary Research Approach to Urbanisation Processes Around the Indian Megacity Bengaluru |
Erscheinungsort | Cham |
Seiten | 71-83 |
Seitenumfang | 13 |
ISBN (elektronisch) | 978-3-030-79972-4 |
Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 19 Sept. 2021 |
Extern publiziert | Ja |
Publikationsreihe
Name | Urban Book Series |
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ISSN (Print) | 2365-757X |
ISSN (elektronisch) | 2365-7588 |
Abstract
Rural–urban transformation has major implications on agricultural land use. This is also the case in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru, where farmers shift from low intensity subsistence agriculture under rainfed conditions to irrigated, market-oriented production of crops and vegetables. As little is known about the effects of this intensification on water use, nutrient leaching, losses of carbon and nitrogen, and soil quality, a long-term experiment was established under well-defined on-station conditions to generate a typical intensity gradient in an in situ laboratory of change. Measurements of key agronomic, soil-related, and meteorological parameters at high temporal and spatial resolution allow to assess externalities and efficiencies of resource use and to predict long-term consequences of intensification on agricultural sustainability. The two long-term rotation experiments established under rainfed and irrigated conditions also allow to collect and calibrate ground-based multi- and hyperspectral crop reflectance data needed for upscaling to high resolution satellite images that cover a North–South research transect across the rural–urban interface of Bengaluru.
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
- Sozialwissenschaften (insg.)
- Geografie, Planung und Entwicklung
- Sozialwissenschaften (insg.)
- Urban studies
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The Rural-Urban Interface: An Interdisciplinary Research Approach to Urbanisation Processes Around the Indian Megacity Bengaluru. Cham, 2021. S. 71-83 (Urban Book Series).
Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/Sammelwerk/Konferenzband › Beitrag in Buch/Sammelwerk › Forschung › Peer-Review
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - Crop Production Under Urbanisation
T2 - An Experimental Approach to Understand and Model Agricultural Intensification
AU - Buerkert, Andreas
AU - Hoffmann, Ellen
AU - Suddapuli Hewage, Renuka
AU - Goenster-Jordan, Sven
AU - Sourav, Suman Kumar
AU - Mock, Andrea
AU - Vazhacharickal, Prem José
AU - Subbarayappa, C. T.
AU - Mudalagiriyappa,
AU - Hanumanthappa, D. C.
AU - Peth, Stephan
AU - Wachendorf, Michael
N1 - Funding Information: Acknowledgements This work is carried out as part of the Indo-German Research Unit FOR2432 “Social-Ecological Systems in the Indian Rural-Urban Interface: Functions, Scales, and Dynamics of Transition” jointly funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Government of India (“The Rural-Urban Interface of Bengaluru-a Space of Transitions in Agriculture, Economics, and Society”). Co-funding and infrastructural support has come from the University of Agricultural Sciences Bangalore (UASB), GKVK Campus which is gratefully acknowledged.
PY - 2021/9/19
Y1 - 2021/9/19
N2 - Rural–urban transformation has major implications on agricultural land use. This is also the case in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru, where farmers shift from low intensity subsistence agriculture under rainfed conditions to irrigated, market-oriented production of crops and vegetables. As little is known about the effects of this intensification on water use, nutrient leaching, losses of carbon and nitrogen, and soil quality, a long-term experiment was established under well-defined on-station conditions to generate a typical intensity gradient in an in situ laboratory of change. Measurements of key agronomic, soil-related, and meteorological parameters at high temporal and spatial resolution allow to assess externalities and efficiencies of resource use and to predict long-term consequences of intensification on agricultural sustainability. The two long-term rotation experiments established under rainfed and irrigated conditions also allow to collect and calibrate ground-based multi- and hyperspectral crop reflectance data needed for upscaling to high resolution satellite images that cover a North–South research transect across the rural–urban interface of Bengaluru.
AB - Rural–urban transformation has major implications on agricultural land use. This is also the case in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru, where farmers shift from low intensity subsistence agriculture under rainfed conditions to irrigated, market-oriented production of crops and vegetables. As little is known about the effects of this intensification on water use, nutrient leaching, losses of carbon and nitrogen, and soil quality, a long-term experiment was established under well-defined on-station conditions to generate a typical intensity gradient in an in situ laboratory of change. Measurements of key agronomic, soil-related, and meteorological parameters at high temporal and spatial resolution allow to assess externalities and efficiencies of resource use and to predict long-term consequences of intensification on agricultural sustainability. The two long-term rotation experiments established under rainfed and irrigated conditions also allow to collect and calibrate ground-based multi- and hyperspectral crop reflectance data needed for upscaling to high resolution satellite images that cover a North–South research transect across the rural–urban interface of Bengaluru.
KW - Agricultural production intensity
KW - Crop rotation
KW - Long-term cropping experiments
KW - Nutrient fluxes
KW - Reference data
KW - Rural–urban transformation
KW - Scenario analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85115669023&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-79972-4_7
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-79972-4_7
M3 - Contribution to book/anthology
AN - SCOPUS:85115669023
SN - 978-3-030-79971-7
SN - 978-3-030-79974-8
T3 - Urban Book Series
SP - 71
EP - 83
BT - The Rural-Urban Interface
CY - Cham
ER -