Agriculture Opportunities & Challenges in Hot Arid Areas
- As long as water is available, the heat and sunlight in hot, dry regions allow for an extended growing season
- Alluvium deposits provide nutrient-rich, fine soils that warm up quickly, but they are at risk from wind erosion and flash floods
- A type of nomadism is still the most common way to farm
- True nomads move around with their animals, looking for new places to graze all year round
- Many are semi-nomadic, where they move their flocks and herds but have a settled home to take advantage of higher levels of supplies near villages and towns
- With the increase in desertification and water scarcity, many people have become sedentary and have settled permanently in villages, towns and cities
- Oases, desalination plants and exotic rivers provide opportunities for settled agriculture
- Egypt is the largest producer of dates in the world
- Date palms are known as the ‘bread of the desert’
- They can be eaten and the Bedouins use dates to make bread
- They are a traditional medicine for swelling and coughs
- The bark can be used for roofing and fencing and the leaves can be plaited into ropes and mats
- The Aswan dam ensures the Nile provides a continued supply of water throughout the year
- In a number of oil-rich countries, such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE, desalination plants provide constant water supplies
- However, these have environmental impacts and are very energy-intensive
- Desalination produces brine, which is extremely salty water, and is returned it to the sea, raising the salinity of the surrounding water
- Due to the costs involved in producing the fresh water, desalination-produced food is more expensive
- Agriculture in hot areas could be more sustainable by:
- Planting vegetation that is drought-resistant or salt-tolerant for animal feed
- Reducing the size of herds will limit the pressure on vegetation
- Using animal dung as fertiliser
- Using solar panels to produce energy
- Using efficient forms of irrigation, such as drip irrigation
- Building small-scale dams and micro-hydro's