Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Standard

Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World. / Shokat, Sajid; Großkinsky, Dominik K.

In: Sustainability (Switzerland), Vol. 11, No. 17, 4558, 01.09.2019, p. 1-19.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Shokat, S & Großkinsky, DK 2019, 'Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World', Sustainability (Switzerland), vol. 11, no. 17, 4558, pp. 1-19. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174558

APA

Shokat, S., & Großkinsky, D. K. (2019). Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World. Sustainability (Switzerland), 11(17), 1-19. [4558]. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174558

Vancouver

Shokat S, Großkinsky DK. Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World. Sustainability (Switzerland). 2019 Sep 1;11(17):1-19. 4558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174558

Author

Shokat, Sajid ; Großkinsky, Dominik K. / Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World. In: Sustainability (Switzerland). 2019 ; Vol. 11, No. 17. pp. 1-19.

Bibtex

@article{525cff18080d4e8cb94ddfb0889d7bbf,
title = "Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World",
abstract = "Soil salinity is a common problem of the developing world as well as the developed world. However, the pace to reduce salinity is much slower in the developing world. The application of short-term approaches with an unsustainable supply of funds are the major reasons of low success. In contrast, the developed world has focused on long-term and sustainable techniques, and considerable funds per unit area have been allocated to reduce soil salinity. Here, we review the existing approaches in both worlds. Approaches like engineering and nutrient use were proven to be unsustainable, while limited breeding and biosaline approaches had little success in the developing countries. In contrast, advanced breeding and genetics tools were implemented in the developed countries to improve the salinity tolerance of different crops with more success. Resultantly, developed countries not only reduced the area for soil salinity at a higher rate, but more sustainable and cheaper ways to resolve the issue were implemented at the farmers' field. Similarly, plant microbial approaches and the application of fertigation through drip irrigation have great potential for both worlds, and farmer participatory approaches are required to obtain fruitful outcomes. In this regard, a challenging issue is the transition of sustainable approaches from developed countries to developing ones, and possible methods for this are discussed.",
keywords = "Advanced agricultural approaches, Resilience, Salinity, Salt tolerance, Sustainability",
author = "Sajid Shokat and Gro{\ss}kinsky, {Dominik K.}",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3390/su11174558",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "1--19",
journal = "Sustainability",
issn = "2071-1050",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "17",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tackling Salinity in Sustainable Agriculture—What Developing Countries May Learn from Approaches of the Developed World

AU - Shokat, Sajid

AU - Großkinsky, Dominik K.

PY - 2019/9/1

Y1 - 2019/9/1

N2 - Soil salinity is a common problem of the developing world as well as the developed world. However, the pace to reduce salinity is much slower in the developing world. The application of short-term approaches with an unsustainable supply of funds are the major reasons of low success. In contrast, the developed world has focused on long-term and sustainable techniques, and considerable funds per unit area have been allocated to reduce soil salinity. Here, we review the existing approaches in both worlds. Approaches like engineering and nutrient use were proven to be unsustainable, while limited breeding and biosaline approaches had little success in the developing countries. In contrast, advanced breeding and genetics tools were implemented in the developed countries to improve the salinity tolerance of different crops with more success. Resultantly, developed countries not only reduced the area for soil salinity at a higher rate, but more sustainable and cheaper ways to resolve the issue were implemented at the farmers' field. Similarly, plant microbial approaches and the application of fertigation through drip irrigation have great potential for both worlds, and farmer participatory approaches are required to obtain fruitful outcomes. In this regard, a challenging issue is the transition of sustainable approaches from developed countries to developing ones, and possible methods for this are discussed.

AB - Soil salinity is a common problem of the developing world as well as the developed world. However, the pace to reduce salinity is much slower in the developing world. The application of short-term approaches with an unsustainable supply of funds are the major reasons of low success. In contrast, the developed world has focused on long-term and sustainable techniques, and considerable funds per unit area have been allocated to reduce soil salinity. Here, we review the existing approaches in both worlds. Approaches like engineering and nutrient use were proven to be unsustainable, while limited breeding and biosaline approaches had little success in the developing countries. In contrast, advanced breeding and genetics tools were implemented in the developed countries to improve the salinity tolerance of different crops with more success. Resultantly, developed countries not only reduced the area for soil salinity at a higher rate, but more sustainable and cheaper ways to resolve the issue were implemented at the farmers' field. Similarly, plant microbial approaches and the application of fertigation through drip irrigation have great potential for both worlds, and farmer participatory approaches are required to obtain fruitful outcomes. In this regard, a challenging issue is the transition of sustainable approaches from developed countries to developing ones, and possible methods for this are discussed.

KW - Advanced agricultural approaches

KW - Resilience

KW - Salinity

KW - Salt tolerance

KW - Sustainability

U2 - 10.3390/su11174558

DO - 10.3390/su11174558

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:85071964061

VL - 11

SP - 1

EP - 19

JO - Sustainability

JF - Sustainability

SN - 2071-1050

IS - 17

M1 - 4558

ER -

ID: 227568562