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Köp båda 2 för 2086 krAbdelaziz Hirich is a research scientist at ICBA center in UAE. He received his PhD in Agronomic Science at the University HASSAN II in Casablanca, Morocco. Dr. Hirich has worked after his PhD as a consultant in EU funded GLOBAQUA project and as a scientist in ICBA center. He is interested in irrigation management, reuse of treated wastewater, salinity, and climate change. Dr. Hirich has published about 17 journal papers. He has developed a large knowledge on irrigation and fertigation scheduling and management as well as the reuse of treated wastewater especially in dry areas. He worked on the introduction of quinoa in Morocco within the EU funded SWUPMED project (2009-2013) where he adapted quinoa to the southern Morocco conditions and tested its response to deficit irrigation and salinity. Hirich has also conducted several training, SALTMED training in Oxford-UK, Agricultural policies in Bari-Italy. He worked also as a consultant for several private study companies in irrigation project design, capacity building training and other agriculture related project. Dr. Hirich is collaborating with two senior scientists to publish this edited volume with Springer; Prof. Redouane Choukr-Allah and Prof. Ragab Ragab. Redouane Choukr-Allah is a soil and water environmental expert with more than 25 years of experience in coordinating and managing field-based projects and technical teams involved in site specific activities. Prof. Choukr-Allah has extensive experience in use of saline water and the use of pre-treated sewage in agriculture, and soil and ground water pollution prevention. Ragab Ragab (former AE of AJGS) is the Head of Water, Soils and Landscapes Group at Centre for Ecology & Hydrology in Oxfordshire, UK. Prof. Ragab is a leader of several projects in the UK and overseas. He is an expert reviewer for the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), International adviser to UNDP, "Brazil National Institute for Salinity Research", Fortaleza, Brazil, Lecturer at Oxford University, External examiner to various Universities in and outside the UK. Prof. Ragab is recipient of several international awards and reviewer for more than 15 International Journals and evaluator for several funding organizations.
Table of contents tentative - Section 1: Case studies- research synthesis Chapter 1.1: Quinoa geographical distribution in the world Bazile D (didier.bazile@cirad.fr) Chapter 1.2: Alternative crops (quinoa, amaranth, avicennia) in North Africa (Morocco) Hirich A (h.aziz@biosaline.org.ae) , Choukr-Allah R (redouane53@yahoo.fr) , El Youssfi L (elyoussfilahcen@gmail.com), Harrouni M.C (c.harrouni@gmail.com) Chapter 1.3: Alternative crops in Europe (Denmark, Italy, Portugal and Turkey) Jacobsen S-E (seja@life.ku.dk), Chaves M.M. (mchaves@itqb.unl.pt), Lavin A (a.lavini@isafom.cnr.it), Yazar A (yazarat@cu.edu.tr) Chapter 1.4: Alternative crops in Middle East (confirmed!) Rao N.K (n.rao@biosaline.org.ae) Chapter 1.5: Alternative crops in South Asia (Pakistan) Munir H (hmbajwa@gmail.com) Chapter 1.6: Alternative crops in East Asia (China) Wu David (wdavidwu@gmail.com) - Section 2: Best practices to improve alternative crops productivity Chapter 2.1: irrigation with saline water on quinoa and other alternative crops (amaranth) Hirich A (h.aziz@biosaline.org.ae), Choukr-Allah R (redouane53@yahoo.fr), Pulvento C (cataldo.pulvento@isafom.cnr.it), Yazar A (yazarat@cu.edu.tr), Jacobsen S-E (seja@life.ku.dk) Chapter 2.2: Deficit irrigation effects on alternative crops Hirich A (h.aziz@biosaline.org.ae), Choukr-Allah R (redouane53@yahoo.fr), Fghire R (r.fghire@gmail.com) Chapter 2.3: Field practices of alternative crops cultivation (sowing dates, density, fertilization, pest management, harvest...etc). Bertero H.D (bertero@agro.uba.ar) Chapter 2.4: impact of organic amendment on alternative crops under arid conditions (confirmed!) Alshankiti A (a.alshankiti@biosaline.org.ae), Gill S (s.gill@biosaline.org.ae), Hirich A (h.aziz@biosaline.org.ae), Choukr-Allah R (redouane53@yahoo.fr)* - Section 3: Physiological and nutritional traits Chapter 3.1: Impacts of abiotic stress on nutritional traits of alternative crops Zurita S.A (andres.zurita@inia.cl) Chapter 3.2: Physiological responses of quinoa under salinity and water stress Koyro H.W (Hans-Werner.Koyro@bot2.bio.uni-giessen.de) - Section 4: Genetic and biotechnological research on alternative crops Chapter 4.1: Diversity analysis of quinoa germoplasm Jellen E (jellen@byu.edu) Mhada M (manal3388@gmail.com) Chapter 4.2: Variet al responses of quinoa to water and salinity stress (latin America) Bonifacio A (abonifacio@units.it) - Section 5: Socio-economic issues Chapter 5.1: International market potential of alternative crops Pedersen S.M (marcus@foi.ku.dk) Chapter 5.2: Benefice-cost analysis of alternati ve crops production Winkel T (thierry.winkel@ird.fr) - Section 6: Modeling Chapter 6.1: Using crop models to predict impacts of deficit irrigation and salinity on alternative crops productivity Ragab, Ragab (rag@ceh.ac.uk)