Buch, Englisch, 328 Seiten, Previously published in hardcover, Format (B × H): 178 mm x 254 mm, Gewicht: 648 g
Soil and Water Quality at Different Scales
Nachdrucked from NUTRIENT CYCLING IN AGROECOSYSTEMS, 50:1-2. Softcover version of original hardcover Auflage 1998
ISBN: 978-90-481-5012-0
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
Proceedings of the Workshop "Soil and Water Quality at Different Scales" held 7-9 August 1996, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Buch, Englisch, 328 Seiten, Previously published in hardcover, Format (B × H): 178 mm x 254 mm, Gewicht: 648 g
Reihe: Developments in Plant and Soil Sciences
ISBN: 978-90-481-5012-0
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
Part 1 covers current issues and methodologies with scale related soil and water quality research. Part 2 covers agroecological and hydrological case studies in which scale transforms form an important part of the research chain. Part 3 consists of papers focusing on methodologies and up and downscaling. Part 4 contains review papers based on modellers' and statisticians' considerations as well as the papers and posters presented during the workshop. Part 5 consists of short research notes.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Hydrologie, Hydrogeologie
- Geowissenschaften Umweltwissenschaften Angewandte Ökologie
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Bodenkunde, Sedimentologie
- Geowissenschaften Umweltwissenschaften Wasserversorgung
- Naturwissenschaften Agrarwissenschaften Ackerbaukunde, Pflanzenbau
- Technische Wissenschaften Umwelttechnik | Umwelttechnologie Wasserversorgung, Wasseraufbereitung
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Umweltgeologie, Geoökologie
Weitere Infos & Material
I: Keynotes.- 1. Soil and water quality at different scales: concepts, challenges, conclusions and recommendations.- 2. Relevance of scale dependent approaches for integrating biophysical and socio-economic information and development of agroecological indicators.- 3. Scale issues in agroecological research chains.- 4. Obtaining soil and land quality indicators using research chains and geostatistical methods.- 5. Some considerations on methods for spatially aggregating and disaggregating soil information.- II: Agroecological and Hydrological Case Studies.- 6. Small scale variability in the flow of water and solutes, and implications for lysimeter studies of solute leaching.- 7. Solute transport at the pedon and polypedon scales.- 8. Space-time upscaling of plot-based research information: frost tillage.- 9. Mapping and interpreting soil textural layers to assess agri-chemical movement at several scales along the eastern seaboard (USA).- 10. Status and trends of soil salinity at different scales: the case for the irrigated cotton growing region of eastern Australia.- 11. Investigating soil and groundwater quality at different scales in a forested catchment: the Waldstein case study.- 12. Slope deposits and water paths in a spring catchment, Frankenwald, Bavaria, Germany.- 13. Hydromorphic soils, hydrology and water quality: spatial distribution and functional modelling at different scales.- 14. Upscaling a simple erosion model from small areas to a large region.- 15. Research on soil fertility decline in tropical environments: integration of spatial scales.- 16. Soil absorbing complex properties of Russian boreal soils and its dependence on the spatial scale of study area.- 17. The influence of nitrate reduction strategies on the temporal development of the nitrate pollution of soil and groundwater throughout Germany: a regionally differentiated case study.- 18. Food supply capacity study at global scale.- III: Methods for Scale Transfer.- 19. Upscaling hydraulic conductivity: theory and examples from geohydrological studies.- 20. Modelling cadmium accumulation at a regional scale in the Netherlands.- 21. The use of upscaling procedures in the application of soil acidification models at different spatial scales.- IV: Review Papers.- 22. Modelling concepts and their relation to the scale of the problem.- 23. Prediction error through modelling concepts and uncertainty from basic data.- 24. Uncertainty analysis in environmental modelling under a change of spatial scale.- V: Extended Poster Abstracts — Short Communications.- 25. Regression model to predict travel time for chloride leaching through pedons using soil morphological characteristics.- 26. Evaluation of nitrate leaching risk at site and farm level.- 27. Information on within-field variability from sequences of yield maps: multivariate classification as a first step of interpretation.- 28. Influence of the cultivation system and the relief on the water content of the Ap Horizon of land subject to different use.- 29. Nutrient losses in surface and subsurface flow from pasture applied poultry litter and composted poultry litter.- 30. Distribution of inorganic nitrogen in agricultural soils at different dates and scales.- 31. The development of a hydrological classification of UK soils and the inherent scale changes.- 32. Regional mass flux balancing for controlling gentle soil remediation operations.- 33. Using a GIS system in mapping risks of nitrate leaching and erosion on the basis of SOIL/ SOIL-N and USLE simulations.- 34. Modelling water and nitrogen dynamics at threedifferent spatial scales — influence of different data aggregation levels on simulation results.- 35. Leaching of nitrogen and phosphorus from rural areas to surface waters in the Netherlands.