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ISPRS Ahmedabad 2009 Workshop Impact of Climate Change on Agriculture

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fullscreen: ISPRS Ahmedabad 2009 Workshop Impact of Climate Change on Agriculture

Monograph

Persistent identifier:
876592167
Author:
Ziegler, Ernst
Title:
Anweisung zur Führung des Feldbuches
Sub title:
nebst kurzgefaßten Regeln für den Felddienst beim Feldmessen, Winkelmessen, Kurvenabstecken, Nivellieren, Peilen und Tachymetrieren sowie einer Anleitung zum Gebrauch, zur Prüfung und Berichtigung der erforderlichen Feldmeßinstrumente für die Feldmeßübungen an technischen Lehranstalten und zum Gebrauch für Behörden und praktisch tätige Techniker
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (VIII, 144 Seiten)
Year of publication:
1905
Place of publication:
Hannover
Publisher of the original:
Verlag von Gebrüder Jänecke
Identifier (digital):
876592167
Illustration:
Illustrationen, Diagramme
Language:
German
Usage licence:
Public Domain Mark 1.0
Publisher of the digital copy:
Technische Informationsbibliothek Hannover
Place of publication of the digital copy:
Hannover
Year of publication of the original:
2017
Document type:
Monograph
Collection:
Earth sciences

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Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Cover

Contents

Table of contents

  • ISPRS Ahmedabad 2009 Workshop Impact of Climate Change on Agriculture
  • Cover
  • ColorChart
  • Title page
  • Title page
  • TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • Workshop Advisory Committee
  • Workshop Organising Committee
  • Programme Committee
  • INTRODUCTION
  • Invited Lectures
  • SPACE OBSERVATION FOR CLIMATE CHANGE STUDIES. Ranganath R. Navalgund and Raghavendra P. Singh
  • GLOBAL CROPLANDS AND THEIR WATER USE - ADVANCED REMOTE SENSING METHODS AND APPROACHES. Rrasad S. Thenkabail
  • GLOBAL LAND SURVEYS FROM LANDSAT OBSERVATIONS: PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE. G. Gutman and J. Masek
  • Contributed Papers
  • Climate Variability and Agriculture
  • Climate [Change Impact] Variability and Agriculture
  • Mitigation and Adaptation Measures
  • TERMINAL HEAT STRESS ADVERSELY AFFECTS CHICKPEA PRODUCTIVITY IN NORTHERN INDIA-STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE THERMOTOLERANCE IN THE CROP UNDER CLIMATE CHANGE. P. S. Basu, Masood Ali and S. K. Chaturvedi
  • CLIMATE CHANGE SCENARIOS WITH WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORK & GEO-ICT-A PRELIMINARY OBSERVATION. J. Arun, J. Adinarayan, U. B. Desai, S. N. Merchant, N. Shah, CPRG Naveen, R. Ashwani, Ipsita Das, D. Sudharsan, A. K. Tripathy, S. Ninomiya, M. Hirafuji, T. Kiura, K. Tanaka and T. Fukatsu
  • CO2 SEQUESTRATION THROUGH MINERAL CARBONATION OF FLY ASH AND ITS USE IN AGRICULTURE. S. D. Muduli, B. D. Nayak and N. K. Dhal
  • WEATHER BASED AGRO ADVISORIES FOR MANAGING THE CLIMATE RELATED CROP PRODUCTION RISKS IN SOUTHERN TELANGANA REGION OF ANDHRA PRADESH. A. Madhavi Lata, G. Sreenivas, K. Vijaya lakshmi and D. Raji Reddy
  • IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON JHARKHAND AGRICULTURE: MITIGATION AND ADOPTION. A. Wadood and Pragyan Kumari
  • EFFECT OF SEDIMENT ORGANIC CARBON CONTENT ON MICROBIAL DIVERSITY OF BHITARKANIKA MANGROVE ESTUARY. K. Sahoo, M. K. Khadanga, N. K. Dhal and R. Das
  • Earth Observation for Climate Change Studies
  • Agricultural Monitoring
  • Agricultural Monitoring [Long Term Changes]
  • Annexure: Abstracts
  • IMPLICATIONS OF GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE FOR INDIAN AGRICULTURE. P. K Aggarwal
  • INDIAN AGRICULTURE UNDER CLIMATE CHANGE SCENARIO. R. P. Samui and M. V. Kamble
  • INFLUENCE OF CHANGE IN WEATHER ON PHENOLOGY AND GRAIN YIELD OF KHARIF SORGHUM AT PARBHANI IN MAHARASHTRA. M. G. Jadhav, V. G. Maniyar and G. R. More
  • VARIABILITY OF RAINFALL AND CROPPING PATTERN CHANGES OF MAJOR KHARIF CROPS IN SEMI ARID TROPICS OF INDIA: A CASE STUDY OF ANANTAPUR AND MAHABUBNAGAR DISTRICTS OF ANDHRA PRADESH STATE. G. G. S. N. Rao, N. P. Singh, M. C. S. Bantilan, N. Manikandan, T. Satyanarayana, A. V. M. Subba Rao, V. U. M. Rao and B.Venkateswarlu
  • CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND YIELD FLUCTUATIONS OF SOME MAJOR CROPS OF JORHAT (ASSAM). R. Hussain, K. K. Nath and R. L. Deka
  • SEASONAL EFFECT ON REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR IN JAFFRABADI BUFFALOES. A. R. Ahlawat, R. M. Padodra and S. N. Godasara
  • ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF HUMAN IMPACTS IN MAHI RIVER BASIN OF WESTERN INDIA. Yogendra Babu Sharma
  • PRODUCTION POTENTIAL OF WHEAT VARIETIES UNDER CHANGING CLIMATE IN RICE BASED CROPPING SYSTEM IN CHHATTISGARH, INDIA. S. R. Patel, A. S. R. A. S. Sastri, R. Singh and D. Naidu
  • MODERN TENDENCIES OF CLIMATE, LAND COVER AND LAND USE CHANGES IN STEPPE ZONE OF KAZAKHSTAN. Alexey Terekhov, Irina Vitkovskaya, Madina Batyrbaeva and Lev Spivak
  • USING GBIF TO ASSESS THE LIKELY IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON WILD RELATIVES OF MAJOR FOOD CROPS. Julián Ramirez, Andy Jarvis, Nick King, Sarny Gaiji, Eric Gilman, Vishwas Chavan and Luigi Guarino
  • IMPACT OF CLIMATIC VARIABILITY ON HIGH-PRODUCTIVITY WHEAT REGIONS OF PUNJAB. P Chandna, BS Sidhu, M Punia, JK Ladha and Raj Gupta
  • IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON SOIL DEGRADATION PROCESSES. S. K. Saha and Suresh Kumar
  • RECENT TRENDS IN CLIMATE AND IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON FOOD SECURITY OF NORTH WEST INDIA. Vinay Sehgal and Surabhi Jain
  • CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT ON AGRICULTURE PRODUCTION IN INDO-GANGETIC PLAIN OF INDIA. R. K. Mall, K. K. Singh and R. S. Singh
  • CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT ANALYSIS ON CROP GROWING PERIODS AND RICE YIELDS OVER INDIA. T. V. Lakshmi Kumar
  • MPACT OF RAISING TEMPERATURES ON YIELDS OF DRYLAND GROUNDNUT IN SOUTHERN AGROCLIMATIC ZONE OF ANDHRA PRADESH. V. Sumathi, D. Subramanyam and D.S. Reddy
  • MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE IN RICE-WHEAT SYSTEM WITH RESOURCE CONSERVING TECHNOLOGIES. H. Pathak
  • MITIGATING METHANE EMISSION IN RICE WITH RESOURCE CONSERVING TECHNOLOGIES. Vandana Gupta, Samar Singh, Parvesh Chandna, Anurag Tewari, Krishan Kumar, Jagdish K Ladha, Raj K Gupta and Prabhat K Gupta
  • IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON PRODUCTIVITY OF RICE-WHEAT CROPPING SYSTEM IN THE INDO-GANGETIC PLAINS. P Chandna, M Punia, JK Ladha, MS Gill and Raj Gupta
  • REMOTE SENSING IN CARBON DYNAMICS OF CROPLAND. G Sandhya Kiran and Shah Kinnary
  • ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND RESOURCE MANAGEMENT OPTIONS IN CROP PRODUCTION. Indira Devi P. and G. S. L. H. V. Prasada Rao
  • AN APPROACH TO IDENTIFY FAVORABLE PHENOLOGICAL ZONES IN VELLORE DISTRICT, TAMIL NADU BY INTEGRATION BIOPHYSICAL AND AGRO METEOROLOGICAL VARIABLES. Mohana P., V. E. Nethaji Mariappan and N. Manoharan
  • [USING REMOTE SENSING TOOLS FOR CLIMATE CHANGE INFORMATION]. Bettina Baruth and Francesco N. Tubiello
  • THE EARTH OBSERVATION DATA FOR AGRICULTURAL AND CLIMATE CHANGE RELEVANT MONITORING IN RUSSIA. S. Bartalev, E. Loupian, M. Medvedeva, D. Plotnikov, I. Savin and V. Tolpin
  • SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE OVER TROPICAL INDIAN OCEAN AND SOUTHWEST MONSOON PERFORMANCE. U. K. Singh and P. S. Salvekar
  • QUANTIFICATION OF THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF SAVANNA VEGETATION USING MULTI-SCALE REMOTE SENSING. Tony Rajan Mathew
  • ASIA LAND COVER CLASSIFICATION USING MODIS SURFACE REFLECTANCE PRODUCTS. Haruhisa Shimoda and Kiyonari Fukue
  • EXPLORING THE CONTRIBUTION OF LAI TO IN-SEASON CROP ACREAGE ESTIMATES OVER THE CANADIAN PRAIRIES. Jiali Shang, Heather McNairn, Catherine Champagne, Jiangui Liu, Ian Jarvis and Xiaoyuan
  • MULTI-FREQUENCY SAR IN SUPPORT OF OPERATIONAL CROP MONITORING. Heather McNaim, Jiali Shang and Catherine Champagne
  • SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF CROPPING OVER INDIA USING MULTI-TEMPORAL IRS AWIFS DATA. S. V. C. Kameashwara Rao, K. Sreenivas, T. Anasuya, M. C. Porwal, S. Pathak. M. S. R. Murthy and P. S. Roy
  • MEASURING WINTER WHEAT CULTIVAR (TRITICUM AESTIVUML.) HEALTH STATUS USING HYPERSPECTRAL REFLECTANCE DATA. Manika Gupta and Prashant K. Srivastava
  • LAND USE / LAND COVER MAPPING OF KEOLADEO NATIONAL PARK, BHARATPUR, RAJASTHAN (INDIA) USING HIGH RESOLUTION SATELLITE DATA. Niraj and S. Palria
  • CHANGE OF LAND SURFACE TEMPERATURE AND EVI IN CHINA FROM 2000 TO 2008. Jing Li, Qinhuo Liu, Qiang Liu and Li Jia
  • DETERIORATING FOOD SECURITY IN THE SEMI-ARID TROPICS. Cristina Milesi, Arindam Samanta, Hirofumi Hashimoto, K. Krishna Kumar, Sangram Ganguly, Prasad S. Thenkabail, Ashok N. Srivastava, Ramakrishna R. Nemani and Ranga B. Myneni
  • MONITORING AGRICULTURAL CROPPING PATTERNS IN THE GREAT LAKES BASIN USING MODIS-NDVI TIME SERIES DATA. Ross S. Lunetta and Yang Shao
  • LAND COVER AND LAND USE CHANGES AND ITS EFFECTS ON CARBON AND NITROGEN DYNAMICS IN SOUTH AND SOUTH EAST ASIAN REGION. Atul K. Jain, Xiaojuan Yang, Miaoling Liang, Rahul Barman, Matthew Erickson and RamaNemani
  • LAND SURFACE CHARACTERISATION IN ARID AND SEMI-ARID REGIONS OF RAJASTHAN FOR ASSESSING THE LONG-TERM CHANGES IN VEGETATION CONDITION USING EARTH OBSERVATION DATA. Yogita Shukla, A. D. Tillu and P. S. Roy
  • AUTHOR INDEX
  • KEY WORDS
  • Cover
    Cover

Full text

ISPRS Archives XXXVIII-8AV3 Workshop Proceedings: Impact of Climate Change on Agriculture 
192 
The results showed that foliar resistance to heat stress in chickpea 
was much higher than the tolerance of reproductive parts. The 
electrical conductivity (EC) increased as a result of rise in the 
temperature (Figure 6), indicating the membrane injury due to heat 
shock, however sensitivity of genotypes differed. 
20 40 50 60 70 
-B-ICCV 92944 
—PG 5 
RSG 143-1 
-9-JG 315 
-Tyson 
-Vijay 
-Annegiri 
-C 214 
Temperature (°C) 
Figure 6. Electrolyte Leakage (EC) in Relation to Temperatures 
among Different Chickpea Genotypes 
The relative membrane stability among genotypes and their 
tolerance to heat could be worked out on the basis of membrane 
injury index as described by Blum and Ebercon (1981) (data not 
presented). Sullivan and Ross (1979) suggested that electrolyte 
leakage from leaf following a heat shock can serve as a simple, 
rapid and reliable technique for measuring heat tolerance. The 
membrane thermo sensitivity test has been used most frequently as 
a technique to screen for heat tolerance in cool-season food 
legumes. 
The quantum yield (Fv/Fm) measured by modulated chlorophyll 
fluorescence system did not show any reduction at this temperature 
(35°C) (Figure7). The reduction in the quantum yield (e’PS2) in 
light-adapted leaf of chickpea was noticed when treatment 
temperature reached to 46 °C (Figure 7). 
Figure 7. Light-adapted Quantum Yield (ePS2) at Different 
Temperatures 
On the other hand, quantum yield drastically declined in fieldpea 
even when test temperature exceeded beyond 30°C(Figure 7) 
indicating that fieldpea is more sensitive to high temperature 
compared to chickpea. The response of ETR (electron transport 
rate) with respect to increasing photon flux density (PFD) is 
typically similar to the response of rate of photosynthetic oxygen 
evolution (0 2 ) or C0 2 fixation in respect to light. No reduction in 
ETR was observed in chickpea up to 40° C except at very high 
temperature of 46°C , however in fieldpea it drastically declined 
beyond 20° C (Figure 8) . This again suggested that heat sensitivity 
of fieldpea is more than chickpea. Chlorophyll fluorescence, the 
ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm), and the base 
fluorescence (F 0 ) have been shown to correlate with heat tolerance 
(Yamada et al., 1996) and are related with PSII (photosystem II) 
and carbon fixation. PSII is highly thermolabile, and its activity is 
greatly reduced or even partially stopped under high temperatures 
(Camejo et al., 2005).The fluorescence inductions kinetics studies 
showed large difference in the fluorescence peaks and quenching 
pattern when leaves were pretreated at 20, 30, 40 and 46°C (Figure 
9). In general , no fluorescence peaks were observed either in 
chickpea and fieldpea at 46°C indicating the threshold temperature 
beyond which photosynthesis may completely stop (Figure 9). The 
pretreatment at 46°C showed irreversible damage of photosynthetic 
systems and quantum yield declined below <0.1 (Figure 9). 
Fieldpea (Electron transport rate) 
1 —46 - P 40 —X— 20 —A— 30 
80 
60 
0C 
ti 40 
20 
55 134 260 440 
PFD (micro mole m' 2 »' 1 ) 
Figure 8. Electron Transport Rate in Pulses 
Chickpea 
46 40 30 20 
Fieldpea 
Mean 46 C Mean 40C 
Mean 30C Mean 20C 
Time (s) 
Figure 9. Fluorescence Induction at Different Temperatures
	        

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