Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) represents a comprehensive approach to farming that aims to address the challenges posed by climate change while ensuring sustainable agricultural productivity and resilience. It encompasses a range of practices and technologies tailored to specific environmental conditions, including drought-resistant crops, precision agriculture, agroforestry, and water management strategies. CSA emphasizes the importance of maximizing resource use efficiency, minimizing carbon emissions, and adapting to changing climatic conditions to ensure food security and livelihoods for present and future generations. By integrating climate adaptation and mitigation strategies into agricultural systems, CSA not only helps farmers cope with the impacts of climate change but also contributes to mitigating its effects by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and promoting carbon sequestration in soils and vegetation. Moreover, CSA fosters innovation and collaboration among various stakeholders, including farmers, researchers, policymakers, and private sector actors, to develop and scale up sustainable agricultural practices that contribute to both climate resilience and agricultural productivity. Through holistic approaches that prioritize environmental sustainability, economic viability, and social equity, climate-smart agriculture offers a pathway towards building more resilient and sustainable food systems in the face of a changing climate.
Title : Exploring the genetic diversity in tannin-rich forages to explain the large intra species variability in tannin content
Selina Sterup Moore, Aarhus University, Denmark
Title : Isolation and functional properties of biomolecules of plants and its application
Balagopalan Unni, GEMS Arts & Science College (Autonomous), India
Title : Primed for the future: PGPR and the promise of sustainable, heritable crop resilience
Prashant Singh, Banaras Hindu University (BHU), India
Title : Revealing allelic variations in candidate genes associated with grain yield under salinity stress between two contrasting rice genotypes
Nisha Sulari Kottearachchi, Wayamba University of Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka
Title : Adaptive strategies of Aristida L. species across ecological zones of Pakistan: Linking soil characteristics with morphological and physiological traits
Iram Ijaz, University of Agriculture Faisalabad Pakistan, Pakistan
Title : Ethnobotanical survey and abundance of weeds in selected Manihot esculenta (cassava) Crantz farms in Osun state, Nigeria
Dada Caleb Mayokun, University of Ibadan, Nigeria