Techniques Applied to Grass Fields for Controlling Salinity and Water Stress
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 December 2021) | Viewed by 3561
Special Issue Editors
Interests: wastewater reuse; salinity; irrigation; turfgrass; modelling; water quality; agriculture
Interests: soil science; agricultural chemistry; hidrology; wastewater reuse
Interests: irrigation; salinity; wastewater reuse; water resources management; irrigation water quality
Interests: urban horticulture; green roofs; living walls; turfgrass science and management; inorganic and organic amendments
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Due to the lack of water in arid and semiarid areas in coastal regions—namely, potable and fresh water—luxurious uses are increasingly contested. In order to solve this problem, low-quality water has gained an increasingly more prevalent role in the planning and development of additional water supplies. In most cases, the salination process is due to irrigation management practices and sea water intrusion. The use of low-quality water for irrigation purposes of grass fields, such as golf courses, other sport fields, gardens and parks, has reduced grass growth and quality, increasing soil salination whilst deteriorating soil structure and permeability. Conventional protection techniques to combat the salination process and water stress of grass fields include soil leaching, enhanced fertilization, localized irrigation systems, use of salt tolerant grass species. However, though these protection techniques may be very useful to plants, they do not solve the problem of soil or groundwater contamination. We especially encourage authors to take advantage of environmentally safe and clean protection techniques of grass fields (drought tolerant grass species, salt-removing grass species, especially grass soil substrates, adequate irrigation systems, minimal water levels that are enough to obtain a good visual appearance of grass), therefore, maintaining their sustainability.
Prof. Dr. Jose Beltrao
Prof. Dr. Miquel Salgot
Prof. Dr. Süer Anaç
Dr. Nikolaos Ntoulas
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- grass field
- golf course
- drought tolerant grass species
- salt-removing grass species
- irrigation system
- soil leaching
- soil substrate
- clean protection techniques
- soil contamination
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