Integrated Studies of Sustainability: Land-Water systems of the Yaqui Basin
FSI Stanford, FSE Project (Completed)2002-2009
Researchers
Pamela Matson (Principal Investigator) - Stanford University
Rosamond L. Naylor - Stanford University
Walter P. Falcon - Stanford University
Robert B. Dunbar - Professor of Geological and Environmental Sciences and FSI Senior Fellow by courtesy at Stanford University
Steven Gorelick
Jeffrey R. Koseff - Stanford University
Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio - Stanford University
Stephen Monismith
Carlos Valdes
Peter Vitousek - Stanford University
The Yaqui Valley, in Sonora, Mexico is a region of rapid demographic, economic, and ecological change in both upland and coastal areas. Situated on the west coast of mainland Mexico on the Gulf of California, the Valley currently comprises 225,000 has of irrigated wheat-based agriculture: recently adding aquaculture to its landscape. It is the birthplace of the Green Revolution for wheat and one of Mexico's most productive breadbaskets. Today, population growth, urbanization, agricultural intensification, land use change, water diversions, groundwater pumping, coastal modifications, wetland conversions, and aquaculture growth threaten the sustainability of certain of the region's resources. Research in the Valley has become timely and critical, both in the Valley's own right, and because it is a likely forerunner to similar irrigated valleys around the world.
CESP began research in the Valley in 1992 when Stanford Professors Pamela Matson and Rosamond Naylor teamed up with Dr. Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio of the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) to initiate a study of fertilizer use in intensive wheat-based agriculture. Results of this study indicated that farmers used more fertilizer than required, and excess fertilizer N was lost in the atmosphere in the form of trace gases that cause air pollution and to water systems where it is carried to the Gulf. The researchers evaluated a number of alternative fertilizer management options, and found that farmers could save money by using less fertilizer and still receive comparable yields from their crops.
Since this initial study, Stanford's research presence within the Valley has expanded to include different dimensions of agriculture and variability, the role of institutions and impact of national and international policies, water resource use and management, aquaculture development, the affect on estuaries of upland land use change, and the burgeoning role of the livestock sector
Contact
Pamela A. Matson
Funding provided by
• The Packard Foundation
Publications
The 5 most recent are displayed. More publications »
Seeds of Sustainability: Lessons from the Birthplace of the Green Revolution
Pamela Matson, Walter P. Falcon, Ashley Dean, Rosamond L. Naylor, Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio, Peter Jewett, Ellen McCullough, Michael Beman, Amy Luers, David Lobell, Toby Ahrens, John Harrison, Gerrit Schoups, Lee Addams, David S. Battisti, Jose Luiz Minjares
Island Press (2011)
Evolution of the Knowledge System for Agricultural Development in the Yaqui Valley, Sonora, Mexico
Ellen McCullough, Pamela Matson
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2011)
Satellite Monitoring of Yield Responses to Irrigation Practices Across Thousands of Fields
David Lobell, Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio
Agronomy Journal vol. 100, 4 (2008)
A Case Study of Land Reform and Coastal Land Transformation in Southern Sonora, Mexico
Amy Luers, Rosamond L. Naylor, Pamela Matson
Land Use Policy vol. 23 (2006)
Analysis of Wheat Yield and Climate Trends in Mexico
David Lobell, Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio, Gregory P. Asner, Pamela Matson, Rosamond L. Naylor, Walter P. Falcon
Field Crops Research vol. 94 (2005)



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