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Books > Professional & Technical > Agriculture & farming > General
Written by leading academics and practitioners in the field, Smart
Villages in the EU and Beyond offers a detailed insight into issues
and developments that shape the debate on smart villages, together
with concepts, developments and policymaking initiatives including
the EU Action for Smart Villages. This book derives from the
realization that the implications of the increasing depopulation of
rural areas across the EU is a pending disaster. This edited
collection establishes a framework for action today, which will
lead to sustainable revitalization of rural areas tomorrow. Using
country-specific case studies, the chapters examine how integrated
and ICT-conscious strategies and policy actions focused on
wellbeing, sustainability and solidarity could provide a long-term
solution in the revitalization of villages across the EU and
elsewhere. Best practices pertinent to precision farming, energy
diversification, tourism, entrepreneurship are discussed in detail.
As an in-depth exploration of the Smart Village on a multinational
scale, this book will serve as an indispensable resource for
students, researchers and policy leaders in the fields of politics,
strategic management and urban and rural studies.
Sustainable agriculture is a rapidly growing field aiming at
producing food and energy in a sustainable way for our children.
This discipline addresses current issues such as climate change,
increasing food and fuel prices, starvation, obesity, water
pollution, soil erosion, fertility loss, pest control and
biodiversity depletion. Novel solutions are proposed based on
integrated knowledge from agronomy, soil science, molecular
biology, chemistry, toxicology, ecology, economy, philosophy and
social sciences. As actual society issues are now intertwined,
sustainable agriculture will bring solutions to build a safer
world. This book series analyzes current agricultural issues, and
proposes alternative solutions, consequently helping all
scientists, decision-makers, professors, farmers and politicians
wishing to build safe agriculture, energy and food systems for
future generations.
In recent years, professionals have combined nutrition, health, and
engineering sciences to develop new technologies within the food
industry. As we are beginning to shift focus on how we view the
health benefits of various food products, perseveration and
processing techniques have become much more vital. New developments
regarding how we store and preserve food are emerging rapidly,
making it necessary for research to be done that studies the latest
scientific improvements and contemporary methods of food
processing. Technological Developments in Food Preservation,
Processing, and Storage is a collection of innovative research on
the latest developments and advancements of preservation
technologies and storage methods within the food processing
industry. While highlighting topics including nutritional
supplements, microfiltration, and thermal technology, this book is
ideally designed for biologists, nutrition scientists, health
professionals, engineers, government officials, policymakers, food
service professionals, industry practitioners, researchers,
academicians, and students.
This book explores the role of in silico deployment in connection
with modulation techniques for improving sustainability and
competitiveness in the agri-food sector; pharmacokinetics and
molecular docking studies of plant-derived natural compounds; and
their potential anti-neurodegenerative activity. It also
investigates biochemical pathways for bacterial metabolite
synthesis, fungal diversity and plant-fungi interaction in plant
diseases, methods for predicting disease-resistant candidate genes
in plants, and genes-to-metabolites and metabolites-to-genes
approaches for predicting biosynthetic pathways in microbes for
natural product discovery. The respective chapters elaborate on the
use of in situ methods to study biochemical pathways for bacterial
metabolite synthesis; tools for plant metabolites in defence; plant
secondary metabolites in defence; plant growth metabolites;
characterisation of plant metabolites; and identification of plant
derived metabolites in the context of plant defence. The book
offers an unprecedented resource, highlighting state-of-the-art
research work that will greatly benefit researchers and students
alike, not only in the field of agriculture but also in many
disciplines in the life sciences and plant sciences.
This work is an interdisciplinary, cross-cultural,
widely-calibrated checklist for EU sustainable landscape
management, which is intended to serve both as an analytical tool
of reference as well as a design tool for local, regional and
European policy making on sustainable developments.
The tool has been developed out of a multidisciplinary study in
EU countries which was designed to find out what would be the
overall requirements for a sustainable management of the landscape
of rural areas. Could these stipulations be brought together in a
comprehensive system with sufficient consistency to comply with the
notion that the landscape is an entity, which should be managed
accordingly? Cooperation of the scientific experts with those
involved in the practical side, and alternating plenary reporting
with subgroup visits to farms in the rural landscapes of the
participants' countries, allowed for the development of some truly
interdisciplinary teamwork. Organic agriculture has been included
to find out how organic agriculture contributes to the rural
landscape.
Food production and consumption processes are largely governed via
control mechanisms that affect food accessibility and environmental
efficiency. Food resource marginalization, inequality, and
deleterious consumption urgently require new governance and
developmental systems that will provide food security and create
consumption patterns that protect the natural environment and food
resources. Global Food Politics and Approaches to Sustainable
Consumption: Emerging Research and Opportunities is an essential
reference source that discusses the challenges and solutions of
food security and consumption control. Food politics can be linked
to persistent challenges of inequitable access, food resource
inefficiency, and control and consumption, which form part of the
local development realities that can address global sustainable
development. While highlighting topics such as rural agriculture,
capitalism, and food chain management, this publication is ideally
designed for policymakers, sustainable developers, politicians,
ecologists, environmentalists, corporate executives, farmers, and
academicians seeking current research on the policies and
modalities of food efficiency and equality.
The South West Peak is a lesser-known part of the Peak District
stretching from Lyme Park in Cheshire in the north to Onecote in
Staffordshire in the south, and from Macclesfield in the west to
Buxton in the east. This landscape area includes tracts of high
moorland, fertile valleys, wooded cloughs, picturesque villages and
tiny hamlets. The farmers of the South West Peak are the people who
have made the landscape what it is today, and it is their personal
accounts of working in this often challenging land that form the
basis of The Land That Made Us. Edited by local author Christine
Gregory and dairy farmer Sheila Hine, and published in partnership
with the Farming Life Centre and the Peak District National Park
Authority with support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund,
this book includes the testimony of over twenty farmers, and it is
illustrated with photographs of them and their farming landscapes.
We hear stories from across the generations of heroic endeavour in
difficult terrain, as well as accounts of day-to-day work and
family life spanning eighty years of farming history. The land had
been farmed in traditional ways for centuries, but the Second World
War changed that, and in succeeding years politics and increasing
mechanisation have constantly rewritten the rule book for farmers.
There is pride in achievement as well as frustration at the often
conflicting demands of food production and wildlife conservation.
The Land That Made Us asks what makes for sustainability in the
short and the long term. The future of this landscape and of the
farming communities that sustain it hangs in the balance, and it is
the farmers' turn to reflect on their past and speculate about the
future.
Cows are my passion. What I have ever sighed for has been to
retreat to a Swiss farm, and live entirely surrounded by cows - and
china. - Charles Dickens Cows are one of the most common farm
animals on earth, but what many people don't realise is that they
are also gentle creatures with a uniquely inquisitive nature. Moo
is a collection of quotes from the famous and not-so famous, paired
with charming photographs that celebrate the humble cow. From
Thomas de Quincey to Mary Quant, cows have fascinated writers,
philosophers, fashion designers, film stars and musicians for
centuries. They are hugely sociable creatures, with several strange
habits, such as being able to sleep while standing, and spending up
to eight hours a day chewing. Moo will open your eyes to their
immense variety, their joyfulness, and their surprising tenderness.
With photos of over 70 of the world's most popular cattle breeds,
this is the perfect gift for anyone from bovine experts to folks
who happen to find cows cute (you'll be surprised by how many
famous names agree!). Pick up Moo today and gain an endearing,
amusing insight into the magic of these animals that are absolutely
integral to our lives.
Crop production in greenhouses is a growing industry, especially in
mild climates, and is very important for the population as a source
of income and clean, fresh food. Greenhouses create optimal climate
conditions for crop growth and protect crops from outside pests. At
the same time greenhouse production increases water use efficiency
and makes integrated production and protection (IPP) possible. This
book provides technical instructions for practice (what to do and
what not to do) and gives answers to the question: How to produce
more clean crops and better quality with less water, less land and
less pesticide. Suitable greenhouse constructions and their design,
adapted to local climates in subtropical, tropical and arid regions
and infrastructure conditions are presented. The necessary climate
control measures - light transmittance, ventilation, cooling,
heating, and CO2 enrichment - and physical measures for pest
control, as well as methods for using solar energy to desalinate
salty water are described. The results of theoretical research are
transferred into methods for practical use, so that readers are
equipped to solve their problems in practice as well as to get
stimulation for further research and development.
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