(Press-News.org) Ottawa (February 26th, 2013) – Canadian agriculture is faced with great opportunities, but also challenged by water-related risks and uncertainties. An expert panel convened by the Council of Canadian Academies has found that water and land resources in Canada can be more sustainably managed by developing forward-thinking policies and effective land and water management strategies, adopting effective governance mechanisms, and harnessing technological advancements.
The agricultural sector is an important contributor to Canada's prosperity and well-being. In 2011, primary agriculture alone produced $51.1 billion in gross farm receipts. It also plays a vital role in the food sector which is linked to nearly $100 billion per year in economic activity and approximately 1 in 7.5 Canadian jobs. As the world's population grows, so does the demand for food. Rising incomes are causing a shift in global patterns of food consumption towards higher-value forms of agricultural production. There is also increased demand for non-food agricultural products such as biofuels and natural fibres.
Dr. Howard Wheater, chair of the Council's expert panel noted, "Agriculture and water provide us with our most basic needs, and are intimately connected. While most farmers are their own water managers, using rain and snow for crop production, irrigation and livestock farming are major water consumers and face increasing competition from other water uses. Agriculture has changed much of our land area and can affect the water environment in many ways. It also faces major challenges due to the uncertain impact of climate variability, including floods and droughts, and climate change." He added, "Our expert panel explored these issues in great detail and our report lays out five practical areas where additional science and action can contribute to better sustainable management of water in agriculture."
Additional science is needed regarding:
the risks and uncertainties of market conditions, competition for land and water resources, and climate change
improved monitoring, modelling and forecasting to facilitate adaptive management
the interaction between land management and water resources – including assessment of beneficial management practices (BMPs), conservation agriculture, and ecosystem services approaches
promising farm-scale technologies that could contribute to efficient water use, reduced environmental impacts, and sound investment decisions
governance structures, valuation techniques, economic incentives, and knowledge transfer strategies that would help to facilitate better management decisions and uptake of sustainable practices
"Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada asked the Council to conduct this in-depth assessment and I am confident that the Panel's work has been comprehensive and the evidence provided within this report will be of significant value and insight for policy- and decision-makers, stakeholders and the wider research community," said Elizabeth Dowdeswell, President and CEO of the Council of Canadian Academies.
###
For more information, or to download a free copy of the report, please visit www.scienceadvice.ca after the embargo lifts.
About the Council of Canadian Academies
The Council of Canadian Academies is an independent, not-for-profit organization that began operation in 2005. The Council supports evidence-based, expert assessments to inform public policy development in Canada. Assessments are conducted by independent, multidisciplinary panels of experts from across Canada and abroad. The Council's blue-ribbon panels serve free of charge and many are Fellows of the Council's Member Academies: the Royal Society of Canada; the Canadian Academy of Engineering; and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. The Council's vision is to be Canada's trusted voice for science in the public interest. For more information visit www.scienceadvice.ca.
For more information please contact:
Cate Meechan
Director, Communications
Council of Canadian Academies
Cell: 613-302-6174 END
Report: 'Water and Agriculture in Canada: Towards Sustainable Management of Water Resources'
Expert panel report on sustainable management of water in the agricultural landscapes of Canada
2013-02-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Now hear this: Stanford researchers identify forerunners of inner-ear cells that enable hearing
2013-02-26
STANFORD, Calif. — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have identified a group of progenitor cells in the inner ear that can become the sensory hair cells and adjacent supporting cells that enable hearing. Studying these progenitor cells could someday lead to discoveries that help millions of Americans suffering from hearing loss due to damaged or impaired sensory hair cells.
"It's well known that, in mammals, these specialized sensory cells don't regenerate after damage," said Alan Cheng, MD, assistant professor of otolaryngology. (In contrast, ...
Researchers find controlling element of Huntington's disease
2013-02-26
Huntington's disease, also known as Huntington's chorea, is a hereditary brain disease causing movement disorders and dementia. In Germany, there are about 8,000 patients affected by Huntington's disease, with several hundred new cases arising every year. The disease usually manifests between the ages of 35 and 50. To date, it is incurable and inevitably leads to death. It is caused by a specific genetic defect: In the patient's DNA, which is the carrier of genetic information, there are multiple copies of a certain motif. "Repeats like this are also found in healthy people. ...
'Fat worms' inch scientists toward better biofuel production
2013-02-26
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Fat worms confirm that researchers from Michigan State University have successfully engineered a plant with oily leaves -- a feat that could enhance biofuel production as well as lead to improved animal feeds.
The results, published in the current issue of The Plant Cell, the journal of the American Society of Plant Biologists, show that researchers could use an algae gene involved in oil production to engineer a plant that stores lipids or vegetable oil in its leaves – an uncommon occurrence for most plants.
Traditional biofuel research has focused ...
Clever battery completes stretchable electronics package
2013-02-26
Northwestern University's Yonggang Huang and the University of Illinois' John A. Rogers are the first to demonstrate a stretchable lithium-ion battery -- a flexible device capable of powering their innovative stretchable electronics.
No longer needing to be connected by a cord to an electrical outlet, the stretchable electronic devices now could be used anywhere, including inside the human body. The implantable electronics could monitor anything from brain waves to heart activity, succeeding where flat, rigid batteries would fail.
Huang and Rogers have demonstrated ...
Cleveland Clinic study shows bariatric surgery restores pancreatic function by targeting belly fat
2013-02-26
In a substudy of the STAMPEDE trial (Surgical Therapy And Medications Potentially Eradicate Diabetes Efficiently), Cleveland Clinic researchers have found that gastric bypass surgery reverses diabetes by uniquely restoring pancreatic function in moderately obese patients with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes.
The two-year substudy evaluated the effects of bariatric surgery and intensive medical therapy on blood sugar levels, body composition, and pancreatic beta-cell function. Striking metabolic changes were observed in patients who underwent bariatric surgery compared with ...
Light particles illuminate the vacuum
2013-02-26
The researchers conducted a mirror experiment to show that by changing the position of the mirror in a vacuum, virtual particles can be transformed into real photons that can be experimentally observed. In a vacuum, there is energy and noise, the existence of which follows the uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics.
If we act fast enough, we can prevent the particles from recombining – they will then be transformed into real particles that can be detected', says Dr. Sorin Paraoanu from Aalto University.
For the experiment, the researchers used an array of superconducting ...
Target: Cancer
2013-02-26
For scientists to improve cancer treatments with targeted therapeutic drugs, they need to be able to see proteins prevalent in the cancer cells. This has been impossible, until now. Thanks to a new microscopy technique, University of Akron researcher Dr. Adam Smith, assistant professor of chemistry, has observed how clusters of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) — a protein abundant in lung and colon cancers, glioblastoma and others — malfunctions in cancer cells.
"We can directly observe protein clusters, in a living cell membrane, that are invisible to traditional ...
Superbugs may have a soft spot, after all
2013-02-26
The overuse of antibiotics has created strains of bacteria resistant to medication, making the diseases they cause difficult to treat, or even deadly. But now a research team at the University of Rochester has identified a weakness in at least one superbug that scientists may be able to medically exploit.
Biologists Gloria Culver at Rochester and Keith Connolly, now at Harvard University, thought one key to stopping the bacteria may lie with proteins, so they studied the mechanism behind the development of bacterial ribosomes—the cell's protein-manufacturing machine. ...
Gut microbiota plays important role in functional bowel disorders
2013-02-26
(24 February 2013) An estimated 50 per cent of patients consulting a gastroenterologist suffer from functional bowel disorders (FBD), such as dyspepsia or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). It is characteristic for these conditions that underlying physiological mechanisms are hard to be found. "However, recent research shows that the gut microbiota is a likely candidate for filling some of the gaps in the causal chain leading to FBD," says Professor Fernando Azpiroz, Chairman of the Gut Microbiota & Health Section of the European Society of Neurogastroenterology & Motility ...
Fecal microbiota transplantation cures gastrointestinal diseases
2013-02-26
(26 February 2013) Clostridium difficile infections have developed into a virtual pandemic over the past two decades. The outcome of standard antibiotic treatment is unsatisfactory: the recurrence rates are high with every relapse increasing the risk of further follow-ups. Faecal microbiota transplantation offers a rapidly acting and highly effective alternative in treating recurrent Clostridium difficile infections (RCDI), as Professor Lawrence J. Brandt (Montefiore Medical Center, New York, USA) points out. According to him, more than 90 per cent of the patients are being ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A virtual reality game integrating smell to fight cognitive decline
To improve screenings with technology, focus on people first
Implementing a digital cognitive screening tool and flexible workflow helps primary care clinics integrate dementia screening
Digital cognitive assessment in primary care may enable early dementia detection and next step care
App-based hearing screenings in family practice may improve hearing disorder diagnosis
Ai-enabled cardiovascular screening shows promise in identifying heart dysfunction in women considering pregnancy
Strengthening global pandemic preparedness: The urgent need for investment, collaboration, and action
FAU CA-AI awarded $2.1million to establish new U.S. Air Force Center of Excellence
KIST develops ultrasonic wireless battery charging technology
Artificial intelligence tools make education materials more patient friendly
Increasing physical activity in middle age may protect against Alzheimer's disease
Prevention instead of reaction: Intelligent, networked systems for structural monitoring
Zoo life boosts object exploration in orangutans
MIT engineers advance toward a fault-tolerant quantum computer
An enzyme-proof glycan glue for extracellular matrix to ameliorate intervertebral disc degeneration
Deepfakes now come with a realistic heartbeat, making them harder to unmask
So, our city’s shrinking—Now what?
Parents with alcohol-related diagnoses are twice as likely to maltreat children
Giant croclike carnivore fossils found in the Caribbean
Palatable versus poisonous: Eavesdropping bats must learn to identify which prey is safe to eat
Being hit by an SUV increases the likelihood of death or serious injury, new research shows
New test diagnoses bacterial meningitis faster and better
Majority of Americans experience some form of gun violence in person
Broader antibiotic use could change the course of cholera outbreaks, research suggests
Higher cigarette taxes may improve childhood survival
Exercise can counter detrimental effects of cancer treatment
Too few ward nurses linked to longer hospital stay, readmission, and risk of death
Friendship bracelet: New technology connects neurodiverse groups of children
Forest in sync: Spruce trees communicate during a solar eclipse
Parents take a year to ‘tune in’ to their child’s feelings about starting school, research suggests
[Press-News.org] Report: 'Water and Agriculture in Canada: Towards Sustainable Management of Water Resources'Expert panel report on sustainable management of water in the agricultural landscapes of Canada