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Water availability: A regional water quality problem
International Journal of River Basin Management, 2003Abstract The limits to water availability are set, not only by the quantity of water in storages or streams but, more fundamentally, by acceptable levels of environmental health. An interpretation of water quality as inclusive of biological quality infers that environmental health and water quality are interdependent.
Dale Watson +2 more
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Water Availability and Potato Crop Performance
2007Agricultural research can help mankind in several ways to cope judiciously with global problems of producing sufficient food from limiting supplies of water. This chapter: (i) summarizes basic concepts on how the system works, (ii) addresses methods of monitoring the water status, (iii) presents the crop responses to drought, and (iv) addresses the ...
Vos, J., Haverkort, A.J.
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2014
Water is essential for plant growth, and modeling of water availability to plants, root water uptake and actual transpiration rates is important to support hydrological, meteorological and crop growth modeling. Soil texture, soil structure and plant rootability are the crucial factors in determining the amount of soil water available for plants.
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Water is essential for plant growth, and modeling of water availability to plants, root water uptake and actual transpiration rates is important to support hydrological, meteorological and crop growth modeling. Soil texture, soil structure and plant rootability are the crucial factors in determining the amount of soil water available for plants.
openaire +1 more source
2003
Water available for use in the United States consists of renewable sources, such as surface water in lakes and streams, and non-renewable sources, such as the extraction of groundwater exceeding recharge rates. The total amount of renewable water resources in the U.S. is 2,459 cubic kilometers per year, or 8,983 cubic meters per person per year.
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Water available for use in the United States consists of renewable sources, such as surface water in lakes and streams, and non-renewable sources, such as the extraction of groundwater exceeding recharge rates. The total amount of renewable water resources in the U.S. is 2,459 cubic kilometers per year, or 8,983 cubic meters per person per year.
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The key drivers for the changes in global water scarcity: Water withdrawal versus water availability
Journal of Hydrology, 2021Zhongwei Huang +2 more
exaly

