Published in: 2004
Publisher:
IWMI
Author:
Drechsel, P., Giordano, M., Gyiele, L.
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The value of soil nutrients in plant growth and agricultural output is closely related to water availability. Likewise, agricultural water productivity is in large part determined by nutrient supplies. Despite the importance of nutrient-water interactions, they are often ignored in analysis. For example, assessments of the benefits of irrigation often fail to consider the costs of increased nutrient export through greater crop harvest while the value of nutrient import is often neglected in discussions of wastewater agriculture. It is only through the combined and balanced consideration of nutrients and water that their true value can be measured and accurate assessments of the relative benefits and costs of various agricultural land and water management options can be assessed. However, to conduct such an analysis it is essential to have methods for valuing soil nutrients. The primary goal of this report is to provide descriptions of some of those methods and some examples of their application. After discussing the interrelationships between soil nutrients and water and reviewing methods for determining nutrient balances, this report describes an array of available methods for soil nutrient valuation and provides a discussion of four nutrient valuation studies, which together cover a range of scales, perspectives, and geographic contexts.
Reseach Report 82
Drechsel, P., Giordano, M., Gyiele, L. (2004). Valuing Nutrients in Soil and Water - Concepts and Techniques with Examples from IWMI Studies in the Developing World. IWMI
English Fertiliser Greywater or wastewater Latin America & Caribbean Sub-Saharan Africa
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