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Food, water, and fault lines: Remote sensing opportunities for earthquake-response management of agricultural water Texto completo
2016
Rodriguez, Jenna | Ustin, Susan | Sandoval-Solis, Samuel | O'Geen, Anthony Toby
Earthquakes often cause destructive and unpredictable changes that can affect local hydrology (e.g. groundwater elevation or reduction) and thus disrupt land uses and human activities. Prolific agricultural regions overlie seismically active areas, emphasizing the importance to improve our understanding and monitoring of hydrologic and agricultural systems following a seismic event. A thorough data collection is necessary for adequate post-earthquake crop management response; however, the large spatial extent of earthquake's impact makes challenging the collection of robust data sets for identifying locations and magnitude of these impacts. Observing hydrologic responses to earthquakes is not a novel concept, yet there is a lack of methods and tools for assessing earthquake's impacts upon the regional hydrology and agricultural systems. The objective of this paper is to describe how remote sensing imagery, methods and tools allow detecting crop responses and damage incurred after earthquakes because a change in the regional hydrology. Many remote sensing datasets are long archived with extensive coverage and with well-documented methods to assess plant-water relations. We thus connect remote sensing of plant water relations to its utility in agriculture using a post-earthquake agrohydrologic remote sensing (PEARS) framework; specifically in agro-hydrologic relationships associated with recent earthquake events that will lead to improved water management.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]A bibliometric analysis of the water-energy-food nexus based on the SCIE and SSCI database of the Web of Science Texto completo
2021
Fan, Jing-Li | Wang, Qian | Zhang, Xian
In the context of climate change mitigation and adaptation, the concept of the water-energy-food nexus (WEF nexus) has resulted in an increased focus on the long-neglected potential trade-offs between the water, energy, and food sector. In this study, we obtained 3077 publications from the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) and the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) in the Web of Science. A bibliometric method was used to characterize the publications, the participating countries, and the research trends in the field of the WEF nexus. The results show (i) the number of scientific publications increased exponentially from 2011 to June 2019, with an average annual growth rate of 27.87%. (ii) The Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres had the most publications related to WEF nexus research. (iii) Environmental Sciences Ecology was the subject category with the most publications. (iv) WEF nexus research was led by the USA, which produced 40.14% of the publications in this field, and five of the ten most influential institutions are American institutions. (v) China ranked in second place regarding publication volume and exceeded the UK in 2016 in annual publications. The Chinese Academy of Sciences was the most productive research institution. (vi) Academic collaboration between countries was widespread in the WEF nexus field; the top 10 most productive countries all had high proportions of collaborative publications (> 40%), and Austria had the highest percentage (91.49%). (vi) Co-word analysis indicated that the term map had three clusters in 1988–2011 focusing on biological production, climate and meteorology, and land surface research. In 2012–2019, the term map also had three clusters, including experimental research on recyclables, resource management, and land-atmosphere interactions. Frequency analysis of the keywords in different countries showed different research emphases in the top 10 most productive countries. The analyses of frequently used keywords also revealed the research hotspots and trends. “Climate change” was the second most frequently used keyword in these countries. The interpretation of climate change mitigation and adoption strategies from the WEF nexus perspective is an important research direction.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-][Water alimentation in "Petite cote" : complementary geophysical prospection of Mbour's zone in Senegal]
1990