Grapes as an alternative crop for water saving
(2012) p.183-192- Abstract
Fruit trees have a vast range of water needs. When it comes to Crop Water Requirement (CWR), grapes may be considered as a low water consumption crop. Thus, grapes can be a good alternative in arid and semiarid areas as compared to dates, citrus, and bananas that have higher CWR. Much water can be saved if agricultural management focuses on high-yield crops with low CWR. Therefore, changing existing water-wasting practices from high to lower CWR crops can save water and improve the virtual water (embedded water) balance for water-scarce countries. This chapter estimates and discusses the potentially saved water amount from changing crop pattern into grapes in Syria and Jordan by computing the embedded water in different typical crops.... (More)
Fruit trees have a vast range of water needs. When it comes to Crop Water Requirement (CWR), grapes may be considered as a low water consumption crop. Thus, grapes can be a good alternative in arid and semiarid areas as compared to dates, citrus, and bananas that have higher CWR. Much water can be saved if agricultural management focuses on high-yield crops with low CWR. Therefore, changing existing water-wasting practices from high to lower CWR crops can save water and improve the virtual water (embedded water) balance for water-scarce countries. This chapter estimates and discusses the potentially saved water amount from changing crop pattern into grapes in Syria and Jordan by computing the embedded water in different typical crops. The results can be used to better manage scarce water resources and lead forward to sustainable water management. This is especially important in the Middle East that faces rapidly depleted renewable water resources.
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- author
- Mourad, Khaldoon A. LU and Berndtsson, Ronny LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2012-02
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Crop pattern, Integrated water resources management, Jordan, Syria, Virtual water
- host publication
- Grapes : Cultivation, Varieties and Nutritional Uses - Cultivation, Varieties and Nutritional Uses
- editor
- Murphy, Ralph and Steifler, Christopher
- pages
- 10 pages
- publisher
- Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:84892072122
- ISBN
- 9781614709503
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 1b02320a-0b91-4b29-95c3-c5b0d58622c6 (old id 2214899)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:40:54
- date last changed
- 2023-09-26 10:01:03
@inbook{1b02320a-0b91-4b29-95c3-c5b0d58622c6, abstract = {{<p>Fruit trees have a vast range of water needs. When it comes to Crop Water Requirement (CWR), grapes may be considered as a low water consumption crop. Thus, grapes can be a good alternative in arid and semiarid areas as compared to dates, citrus, and bananas that have higher CWR. Much water can be saved if agricultural management focuses on high-yield crops with low CWR. Therefore, changing existing water-wasting practices from high to lower CWR crops can save water and improve the virtual water (embedded water) balance for water-scarce countries. This chapter estimates and discusses the potentially saved water amount from changing crop pattern into grapes in Syria and Jordan by computing the embedded water in different typical crops. The results can be used to better manage scarce water resources and lead forward to sustainable water management. This is especially important in the Middle East that faces rapidly depleted renewable water resources.</p>}}, author = {{Mourad, Khaldoon A. and Berndtsson, Ronny}}, booktitle = {{Grapes : Cultivation, Varieties and Nutritional Uses}}, editor = {{Murphy, Ralph and Steifler, Christopher}}, isbn = {{9781614709503}}, keywords = {{Crop pattern; Integrated water resources management; Jordan; Syria; Virtual water}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{183--192}}, publisher = {{Nova Science Publishers, Inc.}}, title = {{Grapes as an alternative crop for water saving}}, year = {{2012}}, }