New Landscape Planning Concepts to Management Strategies for Developing Agricultural Regions
Author(s) -
Javad Taei Semiromi,
Ahmad Ghanbari,
A. Ghaffari,
Baratali Siahsar,
Ebrahim Amırı,
Shamsollah Ayoubi
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
notulae scientia biologicae
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2067-3264
pISSN - 2067-3205
DOI - 10.15835/nsb346361
Subject(s) - agriculture , environmental planning , environmental resource management , landscape planning , business , geography , process management , environmental science , archaeology
Sustainable land resource management depends on the good assessment and planning of current landscapes. This may be possible with application of multidisciplinary researches, as this study presented a multidisciplinary approach in a spatial database frame work using Geographic Information System. ‘Agroecological zones’ concept is used to integrating and characterizing homogenous spatial units. This approach combine theme layers include of available water resources, climate, terrain and soil conditions, associated with land use and settlement patterns. Climatic indices layers, including of growing degree days, aridity index, length of growing period and freezing period were created using the correlation between climatic parameter and digital elevation model. Using this approach the Borujen watershed was divided in 28 ‘agroecological zones’ which defined 3 landscapes or agricultural regions. The most important constraints for developing agriculture in landscape I has topographic, climatic and soil constrains, landscape II has topographic and soil constrains and landscape III has the some limitations of soil. Landscape I and II are much less attractive from an agricultural perspective. Landscape III is suitable for agriculture but, the potential for rainfed cropping system is limited by a lack of growing period during which neither temperature nor moisture is limiting to plant production. In general, the case study of the Borujen watershed indicated that this approach can be used for different scales and adaptive to the particular planning.
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