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About 20 years ago the emphasis in soil chemistry research switched
from studies of problems related to scarcities of plant nutrients
to those arising from soil pollutants. The new problems have come
about because of the excessive uses of fertilizers, the inputs from
farm and industrial wastes, the widespread applications of
anthropogenie xenobiotic chemicals, and the deterioration of soil
structure resulting from certain modern agriculture practises. The
International Society of Soil Science (ISSS) recognized these
problems and challenges. A provisional Working Group was set up in
1978 to focus attention on soil colloids with a view to
understanding better the interactions wh ich take place at their
surfaces. It was recognized that these interactions are fundamental
to problems of soil fertility, as weIl as to those of soil
pollution. After the group had received the official support of
ISSS at its 12th International Congress in New Delhi in 1982 it set
as its priority the assembling and evaluation of information,
relevant to the soil and environmental sciences, concerning the
composition and structure of soil colloids. Prior to that aseries
of Position Papers were published in the Bulletin of the
International Society of Soil Science (Vol. 61, 1981) outlining the
state of knowledge about the composition and properties of soil
colloids.
Large areas of crops are now grown under water-stressed conditions
on non-irrigated and and under limited irrigation in semi-arid and
arid regions. In the future, this area of water-stressed crops will
increase as a result of increasing competition from other water
users, declining ground water levels, and the bringing into
production of fragile lands that have low water-holding capacity,
such as sandy desert soils. Consequently, strategies and practices
to increase total yields and efficient water use must be improved.
After the introductory material and keynotes, the book is divided
into four parts. Part I covers soil water management, Part II deals
with model approaches to evaluate the soil-water-atmosphere
interactions, Part III treats water saving techniques through soil
conditioning, and Part IV discusses case studies of water
management systems. Water Saving Techniques for Plant Growth thus
represents a general account of interest and activities of the
various scientific disciplines which are concerned in desert
encroachment as part of global change.
About 20 years ago the emphasis in soil chemistry research switched
from studies of problems related to scarcities of plant nutrients
to those arising from soil pollutants. The new problems have come
about because of the excessive uses of fertilizers, the inputs from
farm and industrial wastes, the widespread applications of
anthropogenie xenobiotic chemicals, and the deterioration of soil
structure resulting from certain modern agriculture practises. The
International Society of Soil Science (ISSS) recognized these
problems and challenges. A provisional Working Group was set up in
1978 to focus attention on soil colloids with a view to
understanding better the interactions wh ich take place at their
surfaces. It was recognized that these interactions are fundamental
to problems of soil fertility, as weIl as to those of soil
pollution. After the group had received the official support of
ISSS at its 12th International Congress in New Delhi in 1982 it set
as its priority the assembling and evaluation of information,
relevant to the soil and environmental sciences, concerning the
composition and structure of soil colloids. Prior to that aseries
of Position Papers were published in the Bulletin of the
International Society of Soil Science (Vol. 61, 1981) outlining the
state of knowledge about the composition and properties of soil
colloids.
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