Water Use Efficiency for Resilient Economies: Innovative Experimental Approaches Based on the Soil Conditioners
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Water Use and Irrigation".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 December 2022) | Viewed by 16255
Special Issue Editors
Interests: soil hydraulic conductivity; soil water retention; soil physical quality; soil management; soil conditioners
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: soil organic matter; soil chemical properties; organic amendments; irrigation; compost
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Climate change is anticipated to cause climatic variability, and rainfall will be increasingly uncertain and variable. Consequently, the main topic of water use efficiency (WUE) optimization will be growingly central in many environmental sectors, including open field agriculture, protected agriculture, and urban green areas. In this context, the efforts of the scientific community should be aimed at increasing the resilience of the most sensitive agro-environments and green areas.
Overall, the recent increase in the use of alternative water resources such as saline water, sewage effluents, and treated wastewater offers several advantages, such as the availability of a large amount of water for irrigation, the opportunity to reserve better-quality water for human consumption, and a way to protect the environment from direct wastewater disposal to water bodies. Regardless of the nature of the water supply (natural precipitation, irrigation, or alternative water resources), however, a key factor that deserves to be further investigated is soil water retention optimization using soil conditioners.
Soil conditioners, both traditional (i.e., manure, compost, vermicompost) and innovative (i.e., biochar, hydrogel), are generally applied to save agricultural water, especially in arid and semi-arid environments, where specific agronomic practices for dry farms (i.e., irrigation deficit, partial root-zone drying) represent the only economically sustainable options. However, soil conditioners are often applied using approximate rates, because although mineral contributions are considered, the impact on the physical and hydraulic properties of the soil, namely the optimal balance air/water into the soil, is often overlooked. In addition, some of them are still not very widespread (i.e., hydrogel) or, alternatively, they are widely used (i.e., biochar) to reduce water evaporation from the soil, but their effects on greenhouse gas emissions need to be further investigated, because not all is known on this issue.
On the other hand, the use and/or reuse of alternative water resources, organic wastes, and organic soil conditioners in agriculture could produce unwanted effects including, for example, significant changes to chemical and biochemical properties and pollution of water tables. Therefore, studying such effects should be thorough to evaluate pros and cons and establish their effective environmental impact.
The main objective of this Special Issue is to gather high-quality papers related to innovative water management strategies and the rational use of soil conditioners, aiming to maximize WUE and yields, improve soil properties, and mitigate global warming. Specific applications in urban areas, i.e., parks, tree-lined avenues, urban gardens, and green roofs, will be welcome.
This Special Issue welcomes original research articles, reviews, mini-reviews, perspective articles, and meta-analysis studies.
Dr. Mirko Castellini
Dr. Rita Leogrande
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- compost
- amendment
- water use efficiency
- waste reuse
- smart sensors
- biochar
- hydrogel
- soil mulching
- soil water retention
- irrigation
- alternative water resources
- sustainable dry farming
- soil quality
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