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Desertification, land degradation and sustainability / Anton Imeson.

Van Pelt Library GB611 .I44 2012
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Imeson, Anton.
Contributor:
Christine Hikawa Fund.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Desertification.
Desertification--Control.
Reclamation of land.
Physical Description:
xvii, 326 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Place of Publication:
Oxford ; Hoboken, N.J. : Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.
Summary:
Imeson (U. of Amsterdam, The Netherlands) provides a synthesis of research on the causes of land degradation and desertification and what it is, how it is measured, its impact on natural resources, and what can and is being done to reverse it. The comprehensive selection of topics includes: responses to desertification, indicators, key processes regulating soil and landscape functions, human impact on the degradation process, responses from perception to action, global desertification today, ecosystem services and capital, and a way forward: global soil conservation and protection. The book also doubles as an introduction to and study of geography, applied and physical geography, natural resource management, soil conservation, and environmental law, politics, and ethics. Extensive references and further reading are included. Annotation ©2012 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Contents:
Part I The Nature of Desertification 3
1 Desertification, its causes and why it matters 5
1.1 The nature of desertification 7
1.2 The links between global and local desertification 27
1.3 Discussion: desertification as a world-wide and historical phenomenon 27
1.4 Discussion: life and its feedback with the environment 31
1.5 Discussion: the adaptation of people and cultures to desertification 32
1.6 Discussion: Data and evidence for land degradation 34
1.7 Conclusion: why land degradation and desertification occur 35
References and further reading 36
2 Responses to desertification 41
2.1 Finding answers 41
2.2 Conclusion: The causes of land degradation today 51
2.3 Conclusion: strategies to mitigate desertification 52
References and further reading 53
3 Desertification indicators: from concept to practice 57
3.1 Introduction 57
3.2 Approaches to desertification indicators 62
3.3 Global and regional indicators of land degradation and desertification 65
3.4 Applying selected concepts in practice 68
3.5 Desertification, resilience and stability 75
3.6 The soil and water conservation and protection functions 84
3.7 Spatial variability and discontinuity 95
3.8 Hydrological indicators of desertification 100
3.9 Water in the soil and landscape 105
References and further reading 109
Part II Local Desertification Impact and Response 115
4 Key processes regulating soil and landscape functions 117
4.1 Introduction 117
4.2 Fine scale processes 123
4.3 The provision of the hydrological function, runoff and sediment transport 130
4.4 The protection function of the land and erosion 132
4.5 The long-term impact: the vigil network sites in the USA 134
4.6 Hydrological response: what happens to the land when it rains 135
4.7 Water 136
4.8 Nature, natural capital and land degradation 142
4.9 Soil stability 144
4.10 Soil response and soil behaviour 145
4.11 Catchment response, hydrology and the soil 146
4.12 Discussion: vegetation patterns as responses to land degradation processes 148
4.13 Controlled desertification experiments 149
References and further reading 149
5 Human impact on degradation processes 155
5.1 Introduction 155
5.2 Soil erosion processes 156
5.3 Response of soil structure to cultivation and farming 158
5.4 Gully erosion 162
5.5 Grazing and erosion 165
5.6 The impact of fire on Land degradation processes 167
5.7 Case 1: Blue Ridge Foothills 168
5.8 Case 2: Human impact in the Atlantic States 169
5.9 Case 3: Impact of forest logging in California Casper Creek 169
5.10 Case 4: Karuah Forest, New South Wales, Australia 170
5.11 Case 5: Afforestation in Spain 171
5.12 Case 6: Soil erosion impacts in Europe 171
5.13 Case 7: Human impact in the Central Cordillera of Columbia 174
5.14 Case 8: Bolivia Tarije 175
5.15 The sediment load and soil erosion 176
5.16 Monitoring methods to verify impact and management on erosion 177
5.17 Water resource development irrigation as responses 179
5.18 Soil conservation principles and erosion 180
5.19 Conceptual approaches to soil conservation 182
References and further reading 185
6 Responses to land degradation from perception to action 191
6.1 Introduction 191
6.2 Environmentally sensitive areas 199
6.3 The European policy, response, and governance 200
6.4 Applying the adaptive systems approach explicitly 207
6.5 Responding with laws to protect the land and soil 213
6.6 European law and the requirements of the convention 217
6.7 The European soil strategy 219
6.8 Romania: A model national action plan 220
6.9 Italy and the convention 225
References and further reading 230
Part III Global Desertification Impact and Response 237
7 Global desertification today 239
7.1 Desertification today 239
7.2 Global balances and fluxes 247
7.3 Case study: desertification and the crash in property prices 254
7.4 Brazil 257
7.5 Namibia 259
7.6 Dust and sandstorms in China 262
References and further reading 263
8 Desertification, ecosystem services and capital 267
8.1 Introduction 267
8.2 Interactions between desertification and ecosystem services 281
8.3 The impact of desertification on ecosystem services 284
References and further reading 290
9 The way forward: global soil conservation and protection 293
9.1 Introduction 293
9.2 Iceland 294
9.3 The call for action 296
9.4 Europe 299
9.5 Support to the UNCCD 301
9.6 The importance of international co-operation 302
References and further reading 303.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Christine Hikawa Fund.
ISBN:
0470714492
9780470714485
0470714484
OCLC:
741354881
Publisher Number:
99947404331

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