Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa
University of São Paulo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa.
Science of The Total Environment | 2016
Laura Miguel Ayala; Michiel van Eupen; Guoping Zhang; Marta Pérez-Soba; Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; Norma E. Beltrao
Agricultural expansion and intensification are main drivers of land-use change in Brazil. Soybean is the major crop under expansion in the area. Soybean production involves large amounts of water and fertiliser that act as sources of contamination with potentially negative impacts on adjacent water bodies. These impacts might be intensified by projected climate change in tropical areas. A Water Footprint Assessment (WFA) serves as a tool to assess environmental impacts of water and fertiliser use. The aim of this study was to understand potential impacts on environmental sustainability of agricultural intensification close to a protected forest area of the Amazon under climate change. We carried out a WFA to calculate the water footprint (WF) related to soybean production, Glycine max, to understand the sustainability of the WF in the Tapajós river basin, a region in the Brazilian Amazon with large expansion and intensification of soybean. Based on global datasets, environmental hotspots - potentially unsustainable WF areas - were identified and spatially plotted in both baseline scenario (2010) and projection into 2050 through the use of a land-use change scenario that includes climate change effects. Results show green and grey WF values in 2050 increased by 304% and 268%, respectively. More than one-third of the watersheds doubled their grey WF in 2050. Soybean production in 2010 lies within sustainability limits. However, current soybean expansion and intensification trends lead to large impacts in relation to water pollution and water use, affecting protected areas. Areas not impacted in terms of water pollution dropped by 20.6% in 2050 for the whole catchment, while unsustainability increased 8.1%. Management practices such as water consumption regulations to stimulate efficient water use, reduction of crop water use and evapotranspiration, and optimal fertiliser application control could be key factors in achieving sustainability within a river basin.
Environmental development | 2016
Daiana C.M. Tourne; Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; Silvio Brienza Júnior; Carlos Tadeu dos Santos Dias; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; Simone Daniela Sartorio; Carlos Alberto Vettorazzi
Archive | 2011
Daniel Monteiro; Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; S. Brienza Junior; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; M. do S. G. Ferreira; P. G. Martorano
Archive | 2018
Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; Daiana C.M. Tourne; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; V. G. de Sousa; L. S. dos Santos; S. Brienza Junior
Ambiente E Agua - An Interdisciplinary Journal of Applied Science | 2018
Douglas Cavalcante Costa; Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; José Reinaldo da Silva Cabral de Moraes; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; Rubismar Stolf
Archive | 2017
Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; P. M. Villa; J. R. da S. C. de. Moraes
Australian Journal of Crop Science | 2017
Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; J. R. da S. C. de Moraes; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa; R. A. Gomes Junior; V. P. do Amaral; L. E. de O. Aparecido
Revista Brasileira de Climatologia | 2016
Victor Afonso Marinho Pismel; Lucieta Guerreuri Martorano; Daiana Carolina Antunes Monteiro; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa
ENERGIA NA AGRICULTURA | 2016
Rodrigo Almeida Muniz; Carlos Alberto Vettorazzi; Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; Carlos Tadeu dos Santos Dias; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa
Archive | 2015
Victor A. F. Pismel; Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano; Daiana Carolina Antunes Monteiro; Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa
Collaboration
Dive into the Leila Sheila Silva Lisboa's collaboration.
Daiana Carolina Antunes Monteiro
Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz
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