Sustainable Management and Utilization of Permanent Grassland
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Grassland and Pasture Science".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2021) | Viewed by 30365
Special Issue Editor
Interests: agroecosystems; mineral and organic fertilization; soil; soil organic matter; humic substances; biogeochemistry; nutrient availability; near-infrared spectroscopy; sustainability; climate change
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Permanent grasslands (PG) represent a very important culture in today’s multifunctional agriculture, providing an important source of high-quality feedstuff (high nutrient content and digestibility) for livestock and substrate for biogas plants (a substitute for maize). PG also maintain the soil in a permanent production state (the management of C, N, and other nutrients), co-create the surrounding landscape, increase biodiversity, and have other irreplaceable, non-productive functions. The current limiting and fundamental factor affecting the productive role and ecosystem services of PG are recently changing environmental conditions (global climate change), characterized by iterative periods of drought during the stages of intensive growth, high air temperatures during the summer, but also uneven precipitation distribution during the entire growing season. Furthermore, other factors are related to climate change, such as the fertilization (utilization of nutrients during the dry periods), dates of the harvest (harvest of the quality forage), or changes in botanical composition and soil properties (the cycle of carbon and other nutrients). Your contributions to the Special Issue should focus on the latest knowledge about the influence of currently rapidly changing environmental conditions on productive, qualitative, and vegetation changes of PG in relation to the intensity of utilization, level of fertilization, and soil properties, using the long-term grassland experiments. These results will evaluate management measures on grasslands in terms of current changes and support the sustainable rational use of permanent grasslands in the future (sustainable intensification).
Dr. Ladislav Menšík
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Permanent grassland
- Permanent grassland management
- Sustainable intensification
- Fertilization (mineral and organic fertilizers, organic manures)
- Biomass yield
- Botanical composition
- Forage quality
- Soil quality
- Grazing
- Food security
- Climate change
- Ecosystem services
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