2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2006.05.012
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Water use efficiency of common bean and green gram grown using alternate furrow and deficit irrigation

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Cited by 75 publications
(59 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…This could be due to the high yield obtained with AFI7 and lower CWU obtained with AFI14. This result confirms results found by Abdel-Maksoud et al (2002) and Tavakoli and Oweis (2004) for wheat and Webber et al (2006) for common green gram bean production.…”
Section: Crop Water Use Efficiency (Wuecrop) and Irrigation Water Prosupporting
confidence: 82%
“…This could be due to the high yield obtained with AFI7 and lower CWU obtained with AFI14. This result confirms results found by Abdel-Maksoud et al (2002) and Tavakoli and Oweis (2004) for wheat and Webber et al (2006) for common green gram bean production.…”
Section: Crop Water Use Efficiency (Wuecrop) and Irrigation Water Prosupporting
confidence: 82%
“…The pressure on water resources is expected to increase as the requirements for food production and industrial needs go up in parallel with the country's rapidly growing population (Webber et al, 2006). Water resources are limited worldwide and there is an urgent need to identify and adopt efficient irrigation management strategies since irrigation of agricultural lands accounts for over 85% of worldwide water usage (Zegbe et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In semiarid Uzbekistan, improving water use technologies has been identified as a way to increase agricultural production [23] and meet people's food demands. The introduction of low-cost water-saving technologies and the improvement of on-farm irrigation systems have been found to be the main ways to reduce agricultural water demand and improve the quality of this valuable natural resource [27,28].…”
Section: Uzbekistan's Irrigation Reformsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Its 31 million citizens (34% under the age of 14) comprise nearly half of the region's total population [21]. The rapidly growing population has put massive pressure on limited water resources, which has led to water scarcity and the deterioration of water quality [22,23]. The management of water resources in the Aral Sea Basin is a highly complex process that is further complicated by the rising demand for energy and food, environmental degradation, and increased pressure on the region's finite water resources due to economic development, population growth, and climate change [24].…”
Section: Uzbekistan's Irrigation Reformsmentioning
confidence: 99%