Climate Change and Population Growth in Timor Leste: Implications for Food Security |
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Authors: | Nicholas Molyneux Gil Rangel da Cruz Robert L. Williams Rebecca Andersen Neil C. Turner |
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Affiliation: | 1. Seeds of Life/Fini ba Moris, Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Comoro, Dili, Democratic Republic of Timor Leste 3. The UWA Institute of Agriculture and Centre for Legumes in Mediterranean Agriculture, M080, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA, 6009, Australia 2. Directorate of Agriculture and Horticulture, Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Comoro, Dili, Democratic Republic of Timor Leste
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Abstract: | The climate in Timor Leste (East Timor) is predicted to become about 1.5 °C warmer and about 10 % wetter on average by 2050. By the same year, the population is expected to triple from 1 to 2.5–3 million. This article maps the predicted changes in temperature and rainfall and reviews the implications of climate change and population growth on agricultural systems. Improved cultivars of maize, rice, cassava, sweet potato and peanuts with high yield performance have been introduced, but these will need to be augmented in the future with better adapted cultivars and new crops, such as food and fodder legumes and new management practices. The requirements for fertilizers to boost yields and terracing and/or contour hedgerows to prevent soil erosion of steeply sloping terrain are discussed. Contour hedges can also be used for fodder for improved animal production to provide protein to reduce malnutrition. |
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Keywords: | Timor Leste Climate change Population increase Shifting agriculture Food security Small-holder farmers |
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