Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Biosalinity> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 55 of
55
with 100 triples per page.
- Biosalinity abstract "Biosalinity is the study and practice of using saline (salty) water for irrigating agricultural crops.Many arid and semi-arid areas actually do have sources of water, but the available water is usually brackish (0.5-5g/L salt) or saline (30-50g/L salt). The water may be present in underground aquifers or as seawater along coastal deserts. With traditional farming practices, saline water results in soil salinization, rendering it unfit for raising most crop plants. Indeed, many arid and semi-arid areas were simply considered unsuitable for agriculture, and agricultural development of these areas was not systematically attempted until the second half of the 20th century.Research in biosalinity includes studies of the biochemical and physiological mechanisms of salt tolerance in plants, breeding and selection for salt tolerance (halotolerance), discovery of periods in a crop plant's life cycle when it may be less sensitive to salt, use of saline irrigation water to increase desirable traits (such as sugar concentration in a fruit) or to control the ripening process, study of the interaction between salinity and soil properties, and development of naturally salt-tolerant plant species (halophytes) into useful agricultural crops. See also halophile bacteria, which thrive under conditions of high salinity.When properly applied (watering well in excess of evapotranspiration, maintaining soil structure for excellent drainage), brackish-water irrigation does not result in increased salinization of the soil. Sometimes this means that farmers have to add extra water after a rainstorm, to carry salts back down to below the root zone.".
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink www.biosaline.org.
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink www.cgiar.org.
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink crops.pdf.
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink www.prototype-creation.de.
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink www.sciam.com.
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink www.seawaterfoundation.org.
- Biosalinity wikiPageExternalLink www.ussl.ars.usda.gov.
- Biosalinity wikiPageID "39856".
- Biosalinity wikiPageLength "2691".
- Biosalinity wikiPageOutDegree "22".
- Biosalinity wikiPageRevisionID "618444401".
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Agriculture.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Aquifer.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Arid-zone_agriculture.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Arid_Forest_Research_Institute.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Bacterium.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Biochemistry.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Brackish.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Brackish_water.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Irrigation.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Dryland_farming.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Evapotranspiration.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Genetics.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Halophile.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Halophyte.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Halotolerance.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Irrigation.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Physiology.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Salinity.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Salinization.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Seawater.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Soil.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Soil_salinity.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Soil_structure.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLink Sugar.
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Biosalinity".
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLinkText "biosalinity".
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLinkText "salination".
- Biosalinity wikiPageWikiLinkText "use of saline water".
- Biosalinity hasPhotoCollection Biosalinity.
- Biosalinity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:No_footnotes.
- Biosalinity subject Category:Irrigation.
- Biosalinity hypernym Study.
- Biosalinity type Article.
- Biosalinity type Book.
- Biosalinity type Article.
- Biosalinity comment "Biosalinity is the study and practice of using saline (salty) water for irrigating agricultural crops.Many arid and semi-arid areas actually do have sources of water, but the available water is usually brackish (0.5-5g/L salt) or saline (30-50g/L salt). The water may be present in underground aquifers or as seawater along coastal deserts. With traditional farming practices, saline water results in soil salinization, rendering it unfit for raising most crop plants.".
- Biosalinity label "Biosalinity".
- Biosalinity sameAs m.09x_d.
- Biosalinity sameAs Q4915257.
- Biosalinity sameAs Q4915257.
- Biosalinity wasDerivedFrom Biosalinity?oldid=618444401.
- Biosalinity isPrimaryTopicOf Biosalinity.