Libya remains a land of mysteries with a harsh arid climate, a land rich in millenaries of troubled history, a land where the Sahara meet the Mediterranean Sea, a land where the West and the East Mediterranean merge. Libya is also a land where the desert and the sown intermingle in the steppe country where the rainfall is unpredictable, the soils are poor, rocky, saline, rendering rainfed cultivation hazardous, where grazing and rainfed cropping remained for long the only viable agricultural options. Over the past 60 years, oil resources allowed gigantic agricultural development projects, urbanization, road network expansion and well drilling. This changed the ways of life of rural populations, impacting and undoubtedly altering rangelands conditions and systems, as well as native vegetation cover, wildlife and land use. This book reviews the past and current environmental and agricultural condition of the Libyan rangelands with example of how territories and resources are used by tribal communities. It describes, explains and illustrates the landscapes, the vegetation, the wildlife, the rainfed cereal systems and livestock systems, the reasons for the rampant overstocking, the relentless land clearing for hazardous cropping and uncertain irrigation projects, the wild fuelwood collection and charcoal manufacturing, triggering land degradation and desertification. Long-tested rangeland recovery and rehabilitation techniques in Libya are reviewed using appropriate plant material and proven establishment techniques with successes and failures assessed. This book is offered in hopes of a better future for the Libyan people and the whole Mediterranean arid regions from Morocco to Pakistan.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Wallingford
Großbritannien
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-1-80062-715-4 (9781800627154)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Gustave Gintzburger (Author)
Gus GINTZBURGER - PhD 1975 (Plant computer modelling, Strasbourg, France), Retired rangeland ecologist - botanist with over 55 years field experience in North Africa, Middle East, Caucasus, Central Asia, Chinese Mongolia and Australia. Ex- FAO Rangeland ecologist and management (Libya), W. Australian Ag. Dept. / Libyan Native Forage Genetic Resources (collection, conservation, evaluation, selection, seed production), ICARDA Program Leader "Pasture, Forage, Livestock", Dir. Research INRA-CIRAD (France), Scientific secretary 4th Int. Rangeland Congress (1991) and member IRC Continuing Committee (1992-99), Int. consultant Rangeland flora and fauna (Surveys, management, rehabilitation techniques), Honorary professor Samarkand University (2017, Uzbekistan). ORCID: 0000-0002-8356-1879, SCOPUS: 6506160369, https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Gus-Gintzburger
Slim Saidi (Author)
Slim SAIDI presented his PhD (1999) in applied ecology at the CEFE (https://www.cefe.cnrs.fr/en/ ). These days, freelance International consultant associated with CIRAD (https://www.cirad.fr/en/worldwide/our-regional-offices/montpellier-occitanie) specializing in desertification assessment and rangeland restoration in North Africa, the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa. Developed and published spatial / geomatic modelling projects in Africa, Asia and Latin America supported with state-of-the-art RS/GIS processing and mapping applications in the field of agricultural forecasting introduction of new crops and forestry trees. Currently affiliated as a RS/Geomatician with the MTD (Montpellier - https://www.teledetection.fr/index.php/en/). ORCID: 0009-0003-1073-3937, SCOPUS: 55633194200, https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Slim-Saidi
Autor*in
Bardia Consulting, Australia
Consulting rangeland ecologist, France