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Arid-zone agriculture

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As an area of research and development, arid-zone agriculture, or desert agriculture, includes studies of how to increase the agricultural productivity of lands dominated by lack of freshwater, an abundance of heat and sunlight, and usually one or more of: extreme winter cold, short rainy seasons, saline soil or water, strong dry winds, poor soil structure, over-grazing, limited technological development, poverty, and/or political instability.

The two basic approaches are:

  • view the given environmental and socioeconomic characteristics as negative obstacles to be overcome;
  • view as many as possible of them as positive resources to be used.


See also: biosalinity

Websites of some organizations (in alphabetical order) whose main area of interest is arid-zone agriculture are:

ARID, Agricultural Research Institute for Deserts, University of California Riverside: http://www.arid.ucr.edu/
CGIAR, Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research: http://www.cgiar.org/
Desert Research Center, Egypt: http://www.drc-egypt.com/main.html
The Desert Research Foundation of Namibia, http://www.drfn.org/
IALC, International Arid Lands Consortium: http://ag.arizona.edu/OALS/IALC/Home.html
Iran Desert Research Center: http://www.ut.ac.ir/faculties/desert-arid/
The Negev Foundation: http://www.negev.org/
Office of Arid Lands Studies, University of Arizona: http://ag.arizona.edu/OALS/oals/oals.html