Muhuddin Rajin Anwar
Charles Sturt University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Muhuddin Rajin Anwar.
Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2013
Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; De Li Liu; Ian Macadam; Georgina Kelly
The agricultural sector is highly vulnerable to future climate changes and climate variability, including increases in the incidence of extreme climate events. Changes in temperature and precipitation will result in changes in land and water regimes that will subsequently affect agricultural productivity. Given the gradual change of climate in the past, historically, farmers have adapted in an autonomous manner. However, with large and discrete climate change anticipated by the end of this century, planned and transformational changes will be needed. In light of these, the focus of this review is on farm-level and farmers responses to the challenges of climate change both spatially and over time. In this review of adapting agriculture to climate change, the nature, extent, and causes of climate change are analyzed and assessed. These provide the context for adapting agriculture to climate change. The review identifies the binding constraints to adaptation at the farm level. Four major priority areas are identified to relax these constraints, where new initiatives would be required, i.e., information generation and dissemination to enhance farm-level awareness, research and development (R&D) in agricultural technology, policy formulation that facilitates appropriate adaptation at the farm level, and strengthening partnerships among the relevant stakeholders. Forging partnerships among R&D providers, policy makers, extension agencies, and farmers would be at the heart of transformational adaptation to climate change at the farm level. In effecting this transformational change, sustained efforts would be needed for the attendant requirements of climate and weather forecasting and innovation, farmer’s training, and further research to improve the quality of information, invention, and application in agriculture. The investment required for these would be highly significant. The review suggests a sequenced approach through grouping research initiatives into short-term, medium-term, and long-term initiatives, with each initiative in one stage contributing to initiatives in a subsequent stage. The learning by doing inherent in such a process-oriented approach is a requirement owing to the many uncertainties associated with climate change.
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science | 2015
Garry O'Leary; De Li Liu; James Nuttall; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; Fiona Robertson
Mechanistic and explanatory simulation models provide robust and objective methods to extrapolate likely responses of crops and soils to climate change over different landscapes and time periods. Central to such simulation models are the supply of mineralised nutrients, in particular nitrogen, to crops through linked crop and nutrient sub-models that is achieved through modelling soil carbon dynamics. Attention to soil processes is therefore an essential part of building robust and sustainable production systems and understanding the potential impacts of climate change. To the farmer, focus must be on the productive capacity of the land and its rejuvenation to sustain production. In the broader context of reducing atmospheric CO2 concentration through soil C sequestration, understanding soil processes and the immediate environment likewise require attention to productivity issues. This is because without maintaining productivity a better understanding of soil organic carbon (SOC) processes is unlikely to lead to increased SOC sequestration in Australias farming land. Some gaps in knowledge of how to manage SOC are being addressed in a national research effort, including the scant measured data against which models can be tested. Nevertheless, continuing to apply models to push the boundaries well beyond what can be achieved in practice widens the experimental space, allowing new ideas to be tested where physical experiments are not possible. This raises optimism that new ways may be discovered to explain change in SOC and increase SOC where it is possible in a beneficial way.
Field Crops Research | 2007
Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; Garry O'Leary; Dl McNeil; Hemayet Hossain; Roger Nelson
Field Crops Research | 2007
Shigeru Takahashi; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar
Agricultural Systems | 2015
Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; De Li Liu; Robert J. Farquharson; Ian Macadam; Amir Abadi; John D. Finlayson; Bin Wang; Thiagarajah Ramilan
Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2014
Yanmin Yang; De Li Liu; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; Heping Zuo; Yonghui Yang
Geoderma | 2014
De Li Liu; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; Garry O'Leary; Mark Conyers
Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2016
Yanmin Yang; De Li Liu; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; Garry J. O’Leary; Ian Macadam; Yonghui Yang
Environmental Earth Sciences | 2014
Ketema Zeleke; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; De Li Liu
Climatic Change | 2017
De Li Liu; Garry J. O’Leary; Brendan Christy; Ian Macadam; Bin Wang; Muhuddin Rajin Anwar; Anna Weeks