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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-12-20
    Description: Beaucoup de bananes et un peu de canne à sucre pour le rhum : la Martinique vit toujours, pour une part importante, de ces grandes cultures tropicales d’exportation. Mais pour combien de temps ? La concurrence de pays voisins à faibles coûts de main d’œuvre, la fragilité des soutiens de l’Union européenne, font aujourd’hui de cette question une urgence. La Martinique s’interroge sur les espoirs qu’elle peut fonder dans le développement d’une « agriculture biologique » pour répondre à ces défis. Dix-sept chercheurs, experts de l’agriculture tropicale d’une part et des techniques « bio » d’autre part, ont ensemble étudié dans quelles conditions le développement d’une agriculture biologique, certifiée ou non, est possible. Comment l’île peut-elle trouver ses débouchés et contribuer à revaloriser l’image de l’agriculture, en tissant de nouveaux liens entre agriculture et alimentation ? Tel est l’enjeu de cette expertise.
    Keywords: H1-99 ; HF5001-6182 ; agriculture ; économie de plantation ; stratégie de développement ; culture d’exportation ; canne à sucre ; exploitation agricole ; développement intégré ; politique de développement ; banane ; zone tropicale ; bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities
    Language: French
    Format: image/png
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2014-03-26
    Description: Sugarcane is a multipurpose crop whose components may be used, in addition to sugar production, for various energy carriers or end-products (electricity, liquid biofuels and heat) which enhance its economic potential. For many years, plant breeders and agronomists have focused on increasing sucrose yields per hectare and millers on increasing recoverable sucrose per ton of sugarcane in sugar mills. Attempting to exploit the energy potential of sugarcane more fully, calls for a more holistic approach focusing on both sucrose and lignocellulosic components of sugarcane biomass, and gaining some insight into the management practices required to optimize sugarcane cropping systems in these respects. Such options include genotype selection, harvest date with respect to the crop's growing cycle, crop type (plant crop vs. ratoon crops) and harvesting systems (mechanical vs. manual). The effects of these factors are strongly modulated by climate and soil properties, and these interactions are overall poorly known. Here, we set out to examine sugarcane infield management × environmental interactions with respect to (i) sugarcane yield and partitioning of the aboveground biomass; and (ii) sugarcane milling products (recoverable sucrose yield and amounts of coproducts) and their derived energy carriers. Three Saccharum cv . cultivars (R570, R579 and R585) were planted in three locations on La Reunion Island with contrasting management practices and climatological conditions. Quality characteristics of the samples were assessed by conventional and near infrared spectroscopy methods. Product, coproducts and potential energy production were measured and computed using transfer equations and a mill-operating model. Yields and quality characteristics from cultivars and harvesting systems were affected differently by environmental factors – low temperature and radiation, and water stress. The current study also provides valuable information on how combinations between environments, genotypes and practices affect yield and partitioning of the aboveground biomass, and food and energy production.
    Print ISSN: 1757-1693
    Electronic ISSN: 1757-1707
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Published by Wiley
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2013-05-10
    Description: Agro-Land Surface Models (agro-LSM) combine detailed crop models and large-scale vegetation models (DGVMs) to model the spatial and temporal distribution of energy, water, and carbon fluxes within the soil–vegetation–atmosphere continuum worldwide. In this study, we identify and optimize parameters controlling leaf area index (LAI) in the agro-LSM ORCHIDEE-STICS developed for sugarcane. Using the Morris method to identify the key parameters impacting LAI, at eight different sugarcane field trial sites, in Australia and La Reunion island, we determined that the three most important parameters for simulating LAI are (i) the maximum predefined rate of LAI increase during the early crop development phase, a parameter that defines a plant density threshold below which individual plants do not compete for growing their LAI, and a parameter defining a threshold for nitrogen stress on LAI. A multisite calibration of these three parameters is performed using three different scoring functions. The impact of the choice of a particular scoring function on the optimized parameter values is investigated by testing scoring functions defined from the model-data RMSE, the figure of merit and a Bayesian quadratic model-data misfit function. The robustness of the calibration is evaluated for each of the three scoring functions with a systematic cross-validation method to find the most satisfactory one. Our results show that the figure of merit scoring function is the most robust metric for establishing the best parameter values controlling the LAI. The multisite average figure of merit scoring function is improved from 67% of agreement to 79%. The residual error in LAI simulation after the calibration is discussed.
    Print ISSN: 1757-1693
    Electronic ISSN: 1757-1707
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Published by Wiley
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