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The book centres around an analysis of the options for the
agronomic development of semiarid regions with winter rains (i.e.
Mediterranean regions). Data obtained in the northern Negev desert
in Israel served as a starting point. On the basis of these data
crop and sheep husbandry systems were designed and integrated into
agro-pastoral systems in which small-grain crops act as a buffer
for feed production. These systems serves as a basis for rational
planning of regional agricultural development under alternative
development objectives. In analyzing the possibilities a three-step
approach was developed: first the feasibility and robustness of
selected innovative techniques at the farm level were investigated
in relation to variability in weather and prices, then a matrix of
production techniques for a region was formulated in terms of their
physical imputs and outputs, and finally this matrix was embedded
into a dynamic multiple-goal linear programming model. In comparing
results for different goals, the consequencess for goal achievement
and desired production techniques can be made explicit, and in this
way the book can be a guide for actual development planning in
semiarid regions.
In the early seventies, scientists in Israel and The Netherlands
started a cooperative project on actual and potential production
under semi-arid conditions. In Israel research concentrated on
primary production of natural pastures and small grain crops, and
on the associated secondary production of small ruminants. Most of
the experimental work was carried out at the Migda Experimental
Farm in the semi-desert of the northern Negev where the long term
average annual rainfall is 250 mm. In The Netherlands existing
facilities in Wageningen were used for measuring growth,
photosynthesis and transpiration of Negev pasture plants and small
grains under controlled conditions, both as individual plants and
as simulated swards and crops. The joint research program was
initiated by the late N.H. Tadmor and A. Dovrat from Israel and by
C.T. de Wit and Th. Alberda from The Netherlands and conducted by
various scientists from both countries, some of whom are among the
authors of this book. The experimental results first served as a
basis for the development, calibration and validation of simulation
models of the growth and water use of pasture and crops.
Subsequently, additional models were developed, allowing
incorporation of socio-economic considerations, both at the farm
and regional level, so harnessing the research results for analysis
of regional development possibilities."
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