Browsing by Subject "Klimawandel"
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Publication Climate change, cattle herd vulnerability and food insecurity : adaptation through livestock diversification in the Borana pastoral system of Ethiopia(2013) Megersa Bati, Bekele; Valle Zárate, AnneClimate change is one of the dominant drivers of changing patterns in precipitation, rise in temperature and increasing frequency of extreme weather events that present a major challenge to livestock production in arid and semi-arid environments. In the Borana region of southern Ethiopia, the resulting reduction in the resilience of rangelands and heavy cattle losses associated with recurrent droughts pose serious challenges to cattle pastoralism. This study aimed at investigating regional manifestations of climate change and variability, and their impacts on cattle production and household food security, as well as the role of livestock species diversification as an adaptation strategy of Borana pastoralists in southern Ethiopia. The study involved the use of questionnaire surveys, participatory discussions and monthly meteorological data from 1970 to 2011. A total of 242 households sampled from Yabelo and Dire districts of the Borana zone were surveyed between August 2011 and December 2011. Data collection also included cattle herd histories, which were reconstructed for a period spanning five major droughts (between 1980 and 2011), and household-level livestock mortalities due to the 2010/2011 drought. With the use of 24-hour food recalls, data on individual dietary diversity were collected from 339 respondents during the beginning (September) and the end of the short rains (December). Besides descriptive analyses, a range of statistical models including general linear models, generalized linear mixed models, generalized additive models, ordered and binary logit models, and a proportional hazard regression model were applied to different data sets using SAS version 9.3. Herders? perceptions showed that rainfall has become more unpredictable with lower amounts and shorter durations, while temperature and the frequency of droughts have increased. The analysis of empirical data revealed a similar declining trend in annual precipitation and cattle holdings, while droughts became more frequent. A spectral analysis of annual rainfall series showed a quasi-periodic cycle of about 8.4 years for annual precipitation with recurring droughts every 4.2 dry years. The Borana herders suffered heavy cattle losses and experienced severe food insecurity in consequence of increased climate variability. Hence, the study showed that climate change and variability have impacts on cattle production, pointing to a critical future for the sustainability of cattle pastoralism in southern Ethiopia. Analysis of the data on food security showed a high prevalence of food insecurity (78%) and low dietary diversity, with the majority of the households (81%) merely consuming one to three food groups. A large number of the respondents consumed no fruits, vegetables (93%) and meat (96%), suggesting a high risk of micronutrient deficiencies given the declining trend in milk intake. Livestock diversification indeed significantly has improved dietary intake and household food security. Households with large herd sizes, farmland sizes and large family sizes, or households having off-farm income sources were also found to be better-off compared to their counterparts. Analysis of the data on livestock species composition showed that all of the respondents were keeping cattle, while 94%, 85% and 40% kept goats, sheep and camels, respectively. Recurrent droughts, bush encroachment and increased cattle herd vulnerability were among the major drivers of livestock diversification. Species diversity fulfilled a broad spectrum of the herders? livelihood priorities, of which milk production and cash revenues from live animal sales were of highest importance. Adaptability assessments based on a set of nine adaptive traits showed that camels had the highest adaptive capacity, followed by goats, while cattle were the least adapted species. Species vulnerability to drought also reflected the adaptability patterns with cattle being the most vulnerable to drought followed by sheep, and camels being the most tolerant species. In general, the present study showed that climate change and its variability posed a challenge to cattle production, with recurrent droughts causing enormous mortalities and worsening household food insecurity. The adaptation measure of herders through diversifying their herd composition was found to alleviate food insecurity and reduce vulnerability to the periodic climatic shocks. To further enhance herders? adaptive capacity, implementing adaptation strategies aimed at proactively reducing vulnerability to climate risks and enhancing ex-post risk management capacity are vitally important.Publication Effects of elevated soil temperature and altered precipitation patterns on N-cycling and production of N2O and CO2 in an agricultural soil(2016) Latt, Yadana Khin; Kandeler, EllenBoth temperature and precipitation regimes are expected to change with climate change and are, at the same time, major environmental factors regulating biogeochemical cycles in terrestrial ecosystems. Therefore, crop water availability, soil nitrogen transformations, losses, and uptake by plants as well as CO2 emissions from soil are likely to be changed by climate change. Agriculture is known to be one of the most important human activities for releasing significant amounts of N2O and CO2 to the atmosphere. Due to global concern about the changing climate, there has been a great interest in reducing emissions of N2O and CO2 from agricultural soils. CO2 and N2O are produced in soil primarily by microbial processes. Their production and emissions from the soil are controlled by a number of environmental variables including inorganic N availability, soil temperature and water content. Agricultural management practices, such as irrigation, affect these environmental variables and thus have the potential to dramatically alter N2O and CO2 emissions from the soil. The present study is titled "Effects of elevated soil temperature and altered precipitation patterns on N cycling and production of N2O and CO2 in an agricultural soil". The objectives of this study were: to determine the effects of elevated soil temperature on N cycling in a winter wheat cropping system, to investigate the short-term response of N2O and CO2 fluxes during rewetting of soils after extended dry periods in summer, and to determine the effects of different degrees of rewetting on the CO2 emission peaks after rewetting in laboratory incubations. In the 1st experiment, we used the Hohenheim Climate Change (HoCC) experiment in Stuttgart, Germany, to test the hypothesis that elevated soil temperature will increase microbial N cycling, plant N uptake and wheat growth. In the HoCC experiment, soil temperature is elevated by 2.5°C at 4 cm depth. This experiment was conducted at non-roofed plots (1m x 1m) with ambient (Ta) and elevated (Te) soil temperature and with ambient precipitation. In 2012, winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) was planted. C and N concentrations in soil and aboveground plant fractions, soil microbial biomass C and N (Cmic and Nmic), mineral N content (NH4+ - N and NO3- - N), potential nitrification and enzymes involved in nitrogen cycling were analyzed at soil depths of 0-15 and 15-30 cm at five sampling dates. The plants were rated weekly for their phenological development and senescence behavior. We found that an increase in soil temperature by 2.5oC did not have a persistent effect on mineral N content and the activity of potential nitrification within the soil. Plant growth development also did not respond to increased soil temperature. However microbial biomass C and N, and some enzyme activities involved in N-cycling, tended to increase under elevated soil temperature. Overall, the results of this study suggested that soil warming by 2.5oC slightly stimulates soil N cycling but does not alter plant growth development. In the 2nd experiment, in 2013, the effects of a change in the amount and frequency of precipitation patterns on N2O and CO2 emissions were studied after the two dry periods in summer in the HoCC experiment. N2O and CO2 gas samples were taken from four subplots (1m x 1m) of each roofed plot exposed to ambient (Ta) or elevated (Te) soil temperature and four precipitation manipulations (ambient plot, reduced precipitation amount, reduced precipitation frequency, and reduced precipitation amount and frequency). We found that CO2 emissions were affected only by temperature, but not by precipitation pattern. It can be said that N2O and CO2 emissions after rewetting of dry soil were not altered by changing precipitation patterns during dry periods in summer. In the year 2014, using laboratory incubations, we also measured the short-term response of CO2 production to a rewetting of dry soil to different volumetric water contents for 24 hours. This study was conducted by manipulating microcosms with agricultural soil from the HoCC experimental site, which had been exposed to severe drought conditions of three months duration for each of the last six years. The results showed that CO2 production increased with increases in the water content of soils by rewetting at 5%, 15%, 25%, 35% and 45% VWC. With increasing water additions more peaks in CO2 production were detected and different temporal patterns of CO2 emission were affected by adding different amounts of water. It might be due to the fact that with greater water additions successively larger pore sizes were water filled and therefore different bacterial groups located in different pore size classes might have contributed to CO2 production. In summary, the results from field study suggested that climate warming will affect N cycling in soils in an agricultural cropping system. The results from both field and microcosm rewetting experiments contribute to a better understanding of C and N dynamics in soil by investigating the effect of varying soil water content on the emission of N2O and CO2.Publication Environmental and farm management effects on food nutrient concentrations and yields of East African staple food crops(2021) Fischer, Sahrah; Cadisch, GeorgHidden hunger affects two billion people worldwide, particularly children and pregnant women. Human health and well-being are dependent on the quality and quantity of food consumed, particularly of plant-based foods. Plants source their nutrients from the soil. Essential nutrients for both, plants and humans, therefore, predominantly originate from the soil. Very little is known about the influence of environmental factors (e.g. soil types and abiotic factors, such as weather), or farm management choices (e.g. fertilisation or agrobiodiversity), on nutrient concentrations of edible crop parts. The main aim of this thesis was, therefore, to analyse the effects of soil fertility, farm management, and abiotic factors such as drought, on the quantity (yields) and quality (nutrient concentrations) of essential macro- (Mg, P, S, K, Ca) and micronutrients (Fe, Zn, Mn and Cu), of the edible parts of three East African staple food crops, i.e. maize (Zea mays L.), cassava (Manihot esculenta} Crantz), and matooke (East African Highland Banana (Musa acuminata Colla)), and discuss the resulting implications for food and nutrition security. Two research areas were selected in East Africa, one with a high fertility soil (Kapchorwa, Uganda - Nitisol) and one with a low fertility soil (Teso South, Kenya – Ferralsol). In each region, 72 households were randomly selected, and leaf and edible crop parts, and soil samples collected on three fields per household, organised by distance (closest, mid-distance, and farthest field). Maize and cassava were collected in Teso South, maize and matooke were collected in Kapchorwa. Yields, fertilizer usage and species richness (SR) and diversity (SD) were recorded per field. The total nutrient concentrations were measured in all samples collected (soils and plant parts). A drought occurring in the second rain season of 2016 provided the opportunity to analyse water stress effects on crop quantity and quality (Chapter 2). Edible part samples and yields collected in both seasons were compared. Soil chemical and physical properties, together with farm management variables, were compared to edible part nutrient concentrations and yields using a Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA) (Chapter 3). To understand the strength of association between the measurements routinely done by agronomists (leaf measurement) and nutritionists (edible part measurement), samples of each crop were collected, and were compared to each other and to yields, using a bivariate linear mixed model (Chapter 4). During the severe drought, nutrient concentrations in Kapchorwa decreased significantly from normal to drought season in both crops. In contrast, during the moderate drought in Teso South, nutrient concentrations increased significantly in both crops. Lacking nutrient phloem mobility is suggested to play a vital role in mobilisation of micronutrients (Fe, Mn, and Cu), as shown by their decreased concentration under severe drought in the yields of both crops in Kapchorwa (Chapter 2). Soil type had a very strong effect on food nutrient concentrations. Maize grain nutrient concentrations and yields, for example, were significantly higher for all nutrients measured on higher fertility soils. Maize grain had the highest correlations with soil factors. In contrast, corresponding correlations to management factors were much weaker (Chapter 3). Concerning the comparison of nutrient concentrations in different plant parts, low phloem mobile nutrients Ca, Mn, Fe, Zn, and Cu showed the largest differences in correlations between leaves and edible parts. In the same comparison, perennial crops (matooke and cassava) showed lower correlations between leaves and edible parts, than annual crops (maize) (Chapter 4). Environmental factors, such as drought impacted food nutrient concentrations. Severe drought caused a potential “double-burden” for consumers, decreasing both yields and nutrient concentrations, particularly of micronutrients. Considering food nutrient concentrations, apart from yield, as response variables in agronomic trials (e.g. fertilisation or soil improvement strategies) would contribute towards discounting the notion that crops growing on fertile soils always produce healthy and high-quality foods. Leaves may provide information on plant health, however, do not provide enough information to gauge both yields and food quality, particularly regarding micronutrients. The results also showed that measuring the edible part is vital to assessing food quality, particularly due to the observed effects of nutrient mobility, affecting particularly micronutrients and Ca. Ending hunger and improving food and nutrition security for all, particularly when confronted with global change issues such as degrading soils and a changing climate, requires a collaborative effort by all disciplines concerned.Publication Impacts of temperature increase and change in precipitation pattern on ecophysiology, biomass allocation and yield quality of selected crops(2023) Drebenstedt, Ireen; Högy, PetraClimate change poses a challenge for the production of crops in the twenty-first century due to alterations in environmental conditions. In Central Europe, temperature will be increased and precipitation pattern will be altered, thereby influencing soil moisture content, physiological plant processes and crop development in agricultural areas, with impacts on crop yield and the chemical composition of seeds. Warming and drought often occur simultaneously. The combination of multiple abiotic stresses can be synergistic, leading to additive negative effects on crop productivity. To date, little information is available from multi-factor experiments analyzing interactive effects of warming and reduced precipitation in an arable field. In addition, one major issue of studying climate change effects on crop development in the long-term is that weather conditions can vary strongly between years, e.g., with hot and dry summers in comparison to cool and wet ones, which directly affects soil moisture content and indirectly affects crop development. Thus, considering yearly weather conditions seems to be important for the analyses of climate change effects on aboveground biomass and harvestable yield of crops. The aim of the present work was to identify single and combined effects of soil warming (+2.5 °C), reduced summer precipitation amount (-25%), and precipitation frequency (-50%) on crop development, ecophysiology, aboveground biomass and yield as well as on yield quality of wheat, barley, and oilseed rape grown in the Hohenheim Climate Change (HoCC) field experiment. This thesis presents novel results from the HoCC experiment in the long-term perspective. Thus, aboveground biomass and yield data (2009-2018) of the three crops were analyzed with regard to their inter-annual variability, including annual fluctuations in weather conditions.This thesis consists of three publications. In the first and second publication a field experiment within the scope of the HoCC experiment was conducted with spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. RGT Planet) and winter oilseed rape (Brassica napus L. cv. Mercedes) in 2016 and 2017. The objective was to investigate the impacts of soil warming, altered precipitation pattern and their interactions on biomass production and crop yield. In addition, it was examined, whether the simulated climate changes affecting barley photosynthesis and the seed quality compounds of oilseed rape. In the third publication, long-term plant productivity data of wheat, barley, and oilseed rape were evaluated, including aboveground biomass and yield data from the field experiment in 2018 with winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Rebell).Publication Measuring and modelling carbon stocks in rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) dominated landscapes in Subtropical China(2019) Yang, Xueqing; Cadisch, GeorgRubber plantation has been rapidly expanded in Montane Mainland South East Asia in past decades. Limited by long-term monitoring data availability, the impacts of environmental change on rubber trees carbon stock development still not fully understood. Against global warming background, in order to better facilitate regional forest management, we applied synergetic approach combining field survey and modelling tools to improve predictions of dynamic carbon stock changes. The trade-off analysis regarding to rubber carbon stock and latex production optimization was further discussed in view of sustainable rubber cultivation. The first study explored the impact of regional land-use changes on landscape carbon balances. The Naban River Watershed National Nature Reserve (NRWNNR), Xishuangbanna, China, was selected as a case study location. Carbon stocks were evaluated using the Rapid Carbon Stock Appraisal (RaCSA) method based on tree, plot, land use and landscape level assessments of carbon stocks, integrating field sampling with remote sensing and GIS technology. The results showed that rubber plantations had larger time-averaged carbon stocks than non-forest land use types (agricultural crops, bush and grassland) but much lower than natural forest. During 23 years (1989-2012), the whole landscape of the nature reserve (26574 ha) gained 0.644 Tg C. Despite rubber expansion, the reforestation activities conducted in NRWNNR were able to enhance the carbon stocks. Regional evaluation of the carbon sequestration potential of rubber trees depends largely on the selection of suitable allometric equations and the biomass-to-carbon conversion factor. The second study developed generic allometric equations for rubber trees, covering rotation lengths of 4-35 years, within elevation gradient of 621-1,127 m, and locally used rubber tree clones (GT1, PRIM600, Yunyan77-4) in mountainous South Western China. Allometric equations for aboveground biomass (AGB) estimations considering diameter at breast height (DBH), tree height, and wood density were superior to other equations. We also tested goodness of fit for the recently proposed pan-tropical forest model. The results displayed that prediction of AGB by the model calibrated with the harvested rubber tree biomass and wood density was more accurate than the results produced by the pan-tropical forest model adjusted to local conditions. The relationships between DBH and height and between DBH and biomass were influenced by tapping, therefore biomass and C stock calculations for rubber have to be done using species-specific allometric equations. Based on the analysis of environmental factors acting at the landscape level, we noticed that above- and belowground carbon stocks were mostly affected by stand age, soil clay content, aspect, and planting density. The results of this study provide reference for reliable carbon accounting in other rubber-cultivated regions. In the last study, we explored how rubber trees growth and production response to climate change and regional management strategies (cultivation elevation, planting density). We applied the process-based Land Use Change Impact Assessment tool (LUCIA) calibrated with detailed ground survey data to model tree biomass development and latex yield in rubber plantations at the tree, plot and landscape level. Model simulation showed that during a 40-year rotation, lowland rubber plantations (< 900m) grew quicker and had larger latex yield than highland rubber (≧900m). High planting density rubber plantations showed 5% higher above ground biomass than those at low- and medium-planting density. The mean total biomass and cumulative latex yield per tree over 40 years increased by 28% and 48%, respectively, when climate change scenarios were modelled from baseline to highest CO2 emission scenario (RCP 8.5). The same trend of biomass and latex yield increase with climate change was observed at plot level. Denser plantations had larger biomass, but the cumulative latex production decreased dramatically. The spatially explicit output maps produced during modelling could help maximize carbon stock and latex production of regional rubber plantations. Overall, rubber-based system required for appropriate monitoring scale in both temporal aspect (daily-, monthly-, and yearly-level) and in spatial aspect (pixel-, land use-, watershed-, and landscape- level). The findings from present study highlighted the important application of ecological modelling tools in nature resources management. The lessons learned here could be applicable for other rubber-cultivated regions, by updating with site-specific environmental variables. The significant role of rubber tree not limited in its nature latex production, it also lies in its great carbon sequestration potential. Our results here provided entry point for future developing comprehensive climate change adaption and mitigation strategies in South East Asia. By making use of interdisplinary cooperation, the sustainable rubber cultivation in Great Mekong Regions could be well realized.Publication Microeconometric analysis of the impacts of climate change on German agriculture : applications and extensions of the Ricardian approach(2015) Chatzopoulos, Thomas; Lippert, ChristianThe so-called Ricardian approach is an econometrics-based climate change impact assessment frequently used by agricultural and environmental economists. The intuition behind this approach is that, in the long run, the optimal behavior of farms is climate-dependent. In essence, the approach explores the role of climate in determining farm profitability and potential adaptation, by regressing economic or behavioral measures of agricultural outcomes against climatic and various other land and site attributes. The overall output of the approach enables (i) the identification of profitability differentials due to climate differentials, (ii) marginal implicit pricing of climate, and (iii) a probabilistic exploration of long-run adaptation strategies. This cumulative dissertation took up the challenge of improving specific conceptual and methodological aspects of the Ricardian approach in order to render it a more realistic impact assessment tool. In particular, we aimed at a more efficient treatment of the variables that proxy climate, and at the imposition of structure on equations that can reflect adaptation. Three empirical studies were pursued for over 270,000 German farms at three spatial scales: districts (N = 439), community associations (n = 3,515), and communities (n = 9,684). For this reason, secondary data of various formats (e.g., farm census records, measurements by weather stations, digital images) on a host of characteristics (e.g., farm-specific, climatic, topographical, geographical) were extensively processed (e.g., integrated, geocoded, spatially interpolated, zonally rearranged) and spatially matched. We took a multi-model and multi-stage approach from an instrumental-variables (IV) perspective, which we coupled with advances from the subfield of spatial econometrics. From an empirical viewpoint, our results showed that historical climate change has generally been beneficial to the sector as a whole. The impact of historical mean annual temperature (precipitation) on average land rental prices is positive (concave). Indicatively, permanent-crop and vegetable farms value temperature more than the rest farm types, whereas forage farms, and to a certain extent mixed farms, stand out for their resilience to precipitation. Climate change in the near decades is likely to be beneficial, but the magnitude of benefits depends on the farm type one looks at.Publication Nitrous oxide emissions and mitigation strategies : measurements on an intensively fertilized vegetable cropped loamy soil(2011) Pfab, Helena; Müller, TorstenNitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent greenhouse gas which is also involved in stratospheric ozone depletion. There is consensus that a reduction in N2O emissions is ecologically worthwhile. Agricultural soils are the major source of N2O emissions in Germany. It is known that high N-fertilization stimulates N2O emissions by providing substrate for the microbial production of N2O by nitrification and denitrification in soils. However, outside the vegetation period, winter freeze/thaw events can also lead to high N2O emissions. Winter emissions constitute about 50% of total emissions in Germany. Therefore, annual datasets are a prerequisite for the development of N2O mitigation strategies in regions with winter frost. Many studies have investigated mitigation strategies for N2O emissions from agricultural soils. However, N2O release from vegetable production has seldom been studied. None of the existing trace gas measurements on intensive vegetable production is representative for the climatic conditions of Southern Germany. Due to the high fertilizer N-input (resulting in high levels of mineral N in the soil) and N-rich residues in late autumn, high annual N2O emissions are to be expected. N2O fluxes were measured from a soilcropped with lettuce and cauliflower in Southern Germany by means of the closed chamber method, at least weekly, for two years. An additional study was conducted using 15 N labeled ammonium sulfate nitrate (ASN) fertilizer and exchange of labeled and unlabeled residues to obtain information about the sources (fertilizer, residues, soil internal mineralization) of N2O emissions. Different mitigation strategies such as fertilizer reduction, addition of the nitrification inhibitor 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) and banded fertilization were evaluated with respect to their reduction potential on an annual base. Fertilizer reduction is supposed to decrease the soil mineral N level, reducing the available substrate for N2O producing microorganisms. DMPP is a chemical compound which inhibits nitrification enzymatically. In banded fertilization, ammonium rich fertilizer is applied in a depot. This high concentration is also supposed to inhibit nitrification as it is toxic to microorganisms. N2O emissions should be firstly reduced directly by this inhibition of nitrification and secondly, by a lower nitrate content in soil resulting in less N2O release due to denitrification. A high temporal variability in N2O fluxes was observed with emission peaks after N-fertilization, after the incorporation of crop residues (especially in combination with N-fertilization), after rewetting of dry soil and after thawing of frozen soil in winter. Total cumulative annual emissions were 8.8 and 4.7 kg N2O-N ha-1 a-1 for the first and second experimental year in the conventionally (broadcast) fertilized treatment. This treatment was fertilized according to the German Target Value System. N2O emission factors were 1.6 and 0.8%. This is within the range of 0.3 - 3% which is cited in the Guidelines for the Calculation of National Greenhouse Gas Inventories proposed by the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC). A positive correlation was found in both years between the mean nitrate content of the top soil and the cumulative N2O emissions of all treatments (r2=0.44 and 0.68) as well as between the N-surpluses and the cumulative N2O emissions of the different fertilizer levels during the first year (r2=0.95). Fertilizer reduction from fertilization according to good agricultural practice following the recommendations of the German Target Value System reduced annual N2O emissions by 17% in the first experimental year without yield reduction. For the second year, the reducing effect was 10%, but statistically not significant. Another fertilizer reduction of a further 20% reduced N2O emissions, but also resulted in lower lettuce yields in the first year. Therefore, an additional fertilizer reduction is not recommendable. This work provides, for the first time, annual datasets on the effect of DMPP-application on N2O emissions. Addition of DMPP significantly reduced annual N2O emissions by > 40% during both years, there was also a pronounced effect, both during the vegetation period and winter. The reason for the reducing effect in winter is not yet clear because the degradation of the active agent DMPP is temperature dependent and should take about 6 to 8 weeks under summer climatic conditions. However, we still observed significant reductions in N2O emissions in winter, about 3 months after the application. Furthermore, a reduction in CO2 release was observed indicating a possible influence on heterotrophic activities or at least on their C-turnover. Due to its high N2O mitigation potential, further investigations concerning the functional and structural changes in microbial biomass after DMPP application are needed. Banded fertilization with ASN did not result in the expected reduction in N2O emissions on an annual base. Even when exchanging the ASN fertilizer by nitrate-free ammonium sulfate, N2O emissions were not diminished. We assume that the high emissions were derived from the microbially intact surroundings of the depots, where nitrification was not inhibited and nitrate concentrations were probably very high, creating ideal conditions for denitrification. After one year, the major part of the fertilizer-15N was found in the soil. Only between 13 -15% of the fertilizer was taken up by the marketable plant parts. 1.4% of the 15N was lost as N2O-N. Total 15N recovery was 70% after one year. The losses of non-recovered N were probably caused by nitrate leaching or as gaseous compounds such as N2 or NOx. Compared to cereal production systems, the N use efficiency of this vegetable production system is much lower, even with an optimized fertilization strategy. The measurement of 15N abundances in the N2O revealed that the most significant part of the emissions (38%) was derived from the fertilizer-N which had been taken up by cauliflower residues. N2O emissions directly derived from lettuce and cauliflower fertilizer contributed 26% and 20% respectively while N2O emissions from soil internal N pools accounted for 15%. The contribution of lettuce residues was negligible due to their low amount of C and N. The reason for the high importance of the cauliflower residues was ascribed to the temporarily C-limitation of the system and the provision of electron donators by organic material. Furthermore, O2 is consumed during their degradation leading to the formation of anaerobic microsites when soil moisture is high. These sites offer ideal conditions for denitrification. Especially the combination of mineral N-fertilization and input of organic substance was found to increase N2O emissions. Therefore, the influence of a de-synchronization of the incorporation of crop residues and the mineral N-fertilization by waiting periods of up to 3 weeks was tested in an additional field trial during the cultivation of chard. The longer the waiting time between incorporation of crop residues and N-fertilizer application was, the lower were the N2O emissions. However, the effect was not statistically significant on an annual base. In an additional microcosm incubation model study, the effect of reduced and increased input as well as of different C/N-ratios of cauliflower residues was analyzed. It was shown that due to the high nitrate level in the microcosms only the amount of residue input has an effect on the N2O emissions. The N2O emissions increased with increased amount of cauliflower residues. Although the emission factors were within the range given by the IPCC, the absolute annual N2O emission was high in intensive vegetable production due to the high N-input. Further research is required in order to fully understand the effect of DMPP on the processes of N2O production in the field. Our study underlines the importance of avoiding N-surpluses and of strategies for residue management to reduce N2O emissions in intensive vegetable production.Publication Small-scale irrigation and womens empowerment : lessons from an irrigation intervention in Northern Ghana(2022) Basauri Bryan, Elizabeth; Zeller, ManfredThis dissertation uses a mixed-methods approach to explore issues related to women’s empowerment and small-scale irrigation from several different angles: conceptually, based on a literature review, qualitatively and quantitatively, based on a case study in Northern Ghana, and qualitatively, as part of a larger effort of development organizations to promote adaptation to climate change. The analysis relies on a conceptual framework that illustrates the linkages between small-scale irrigation and the domains of women’s empowerment as well as the broader opportunity structure shaping these relationships. It then uses qualitative and quantitative data from the case study area to identify what aspects of women’s empowerment are salient in this context and how the irrigation intervention influences outcomes for women. Finally, the dissertation draws lessons from a capacity needs assessment of development organizations to identify areas for strengthening the delivery of gender-sensitive programs. Thus, the main research questions addressed by this dissertation are: 1) What are the linkages between small-scale irrigation technologies/systems and dimensions of women’s empowerment? 2) What aspects of women’s empowerment emerge as the most salient in the context of Northern Ghana where small scale irrigation is practiced and modern technologies (motor pumps) are being introduced? 3) How does the introduction of small-scale irrigation technologies (specifically motor pumps) affect indicators of women’s empowerment? 4) What are the gender-related capacity needs of development organizations working to promote climate change adaptation (of which small-scale irrigation is an important practice)? The findings in this dissertation suggest that there are many factors to consider in the design and dissemination of small-scale irrigation technologies to ensure that these are equitably distributed and that both men and women have the opportunity to engage in and benefit from irrigation. These include gendered preferences for the type of irrigation technology or system, the underlying socio-political environment shaping the barriers that men and women face, and implementation approaches. Moving beyond simply reaching women (that is, counting their participation in program activities) to benefitting and empowering women (increasing their well-being outcomes and expanding their ability to make strategic life decisions) requires knowledge of the local context and dedicated attention toward ensuring that outcomes for women are achieved, even if this means expanding activities and opportunities outside of agriculture. Thus, greater efforts are also needed to build the capacity of implementing organizations to deliver gender-responsive programs. Creating platforms, like stakeholder consultation processes or dialogues, for setting goals and sharing information, approaches, and lessons learned is one way to build this capacity. Integrating gender-sensitive research tools into strategy development, project design, implementation, and monitoring and evaluation of implementing agencies would also support the development of more gender-responsive irrigation interventions and would contribute to fill remaining research gaps on the gendered implications of alternative agricultural technologies and practices. While this dissertation provides some evidence on the impacts of motor pumps for small-scale irrigation on women’s empowerment, this is only one of many types of irrigation technologies and approaches. More research is needed on the implications for women’s empowerment of alternative irrigation technologies, systems, and dissemination tactics, including group-based and service-based approaches.Publication The genetic basis of heat tolerance in temperate maize (Zea mays L.)(2016) Frey, Felix P.; Stich, BenjaminThe global mean temperature and probability of heat waves are expected to increase in the future, which has the potential to cause severe damages to maize production. To elucidate the genetic mechanisms of the response of temperate maize to heat stress and for the tolerance to heat stress, in a first experiment I applied gene expression profiling. Therewith, I investigated the transcriptomic response of temperate maize to linearly increasing heat levels. Further, I identified genes associated with heat tolerance in a set of eight genotypes with contrasting heat tolerance behavior. I identified 607 heat responsive genes, which elucidate the genetic pathways behind the response of maize to heat stress and can help to expand the knowledge of plant responses to other abiotic stresses. Further, I identified 39 genes which were differentially regulated between heat tolerant and heat susceptible inbreds and, thus, are putative heat tolerance candidate genes. Two of these candidate genes were located in genome regions which were associated with heat tolerance during seedling and adult stage that have been detected in QTL studies in the frame of this thesis. Their exact molecular functions, however, are still unknown. The statistical approach to identify heat tolerance genes, presented in my thesis, enables researchers to investigate the transcriptomic response of multiple genotypes to changing conditions across several experiments, considering their natural variation for a quantitative trait. In order to develop more heat tolerant cultivars, knowledge of natural variation for heat tolerance in temperate maize is indispensable. Therefore, heat tolerance was assessed in a set of intra- and interpool Dent and Flint populations on a multi-environment level. Usually, heat stress in temperate Europe occurs during the adult stage of maize. However, as maize is of increasing importance as a biogas crop, farmers can reduce the growth period by postponed sowing after the harvest of the winter cereals in early summer and, thus, sensitive maize seedlings can be exposed to heat stress. Therefore, I aimed to assess heat tolerance in six connected segregating Dent and Flint populations during both developmental stages considering besides multiple environments also multiple traits. At heat stress, I observed an average decrease of 20% of the shoot dry weight during seedling stage and an average of 50% of yield loss, when heat stress was present during adult stage. At the heat locations heat stress was present in the year, when the experiments were conducted as temperatures exceeded 32°C there for more than 400 hours during the growing period in contrast to less than 30 hours at the standard locations. This emphasizes that maize crop production can suffer with the increasing number and intensity of summer heat waves. Furthermore, the study revealed strong differences between genotypes, which was indispensable to differentiate between heat tolerant and heat susceptible inbred lines. The tested genotypes originating from the Flint pool turned out to possess higher heat tolerance during seedling stage, whereas the genotypes derived from the Dent pool possessed higher heat tolerance during adult stage. This fact could be exploited by the maintenance of two pools with contrasting heat tolerance and could be beneficial for hybrid breeding. A direct selection of more heat tolerant genotypes in terms of grain yield is expensive and time-consuming. To facilitate the selection process in order to develop more heat tolerant cultivars, breeders could make use of marker assisted selection. To lay the foundation for this technique, in my thesis, QTL for heat tolerance during adult and during seedling stage were identified with the previously mentioned populations. Two QTL explained 19% of the total variance for heat tolerance with respect to grain yield in a simultaneous fit. Furthermore each two QTL were identified for two principal components, which accounted for heat tolerance during seedling stage. They explained 14 and 12% of the respective variance. The results can be used by breeding companies to develop marker assays in order to select heat tolerant genotypes from their proprietary genetic material during both stages in an initial screening. This would reduce the field capacities considerably, which are needed to test heat tolerance on a field level.