Small-scale farming in drylands: New models for resilient practices of millet and sorghum cultivation
PLOS ONE • Vol/Iss. 18(2) • PLOS ONE • • Published In • Pages: 1-17 •
By Ruiz-Giralt, Abel, Biagetti, Stefano, Madella, Marco, Lancelotti, Carla
Hypothesis
Physio-climatic, soil composition, spatial, and growing season factors will predict the selection of pearl millet for cultivation.
Note
Variance of temperature seasonality, variance of topsoil volumetric water content at 33 kPA, mean subsoil gravel content, mean topsoil clay content, mean duration of the growing cycle, mean temperature of the wettest quarter, variance of topsoil organic carbon content, variance of topsoil silt content, and mean temperature during the driest quarter. Spatial data played a relatively insignificant role.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Predictive model | Mostly supported | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Physio-climatic factors | Independent | Climate, Geography, Topography And Geology |
Spatial factors | Independent | Location |
Growing season | Independent | Annual Cycle |
Selection of pearl millet | Dependent | Tillage |
Soil composition factors | Independent | Soil |