Your search found 7 records
1 Boersma, L.; Feng, Y.; Li, X. 1993. Plant responses to drought and salinity stresses. In Lieth, H.; Al Masoom, A. A. (Eds.), Towards the rational use of high salinity tolerant plants: Vol.2 - Agriculture and forestry under marginal soil water conditions. Proceedings of the first ASWAS conference, United Arab Emirates University, Al Ain, UAE, 8-15 December 1990. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp.13-26.
Drought ; Salinity ; Plant growth ; Water stress ; Environmental effects
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.5 G000 LEI Record No: H015921)

2 Cabangon, R. J.; Tuong, T. P.; Lu, G.; Bouman, B. A. M.; Feng, Y.; Zhichuan, Z.; Chen, C. D.; Wang, J. C. 2003. Irrigation management effects on yield and water productivity of hybrid, inbred and aerobic rice varieties in China. In ICID Asian Regional Workshop, Sustainable Development of Water Resources and Management and Operation of Participatory Irrigation Organizations, November 10-12, 2003, The Grand Hotel, Taipei. Vol.1. Taipei, Taiwan: ICID. pp.184-210.
Irrigation management ; Productivity ; Rice ; Water balance ; Experiments ; Crop yield / China
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7.2 G570 ICI Record No: H033346)
https://publications.iwmi.org/pdf/H033346.pdf

3 Cabangon, R.; Lu, G.; Tuong, T. P.; Bouman, B. A. M.; Feng, Y.; Zichuan, Z. 2003. Irrigation management effects on yield and water productivity of inbred and Aerobic rice varieties in Kaifeng. In Yellow River Conservancy Commission. Proceedings, 1st International Yellow River Forum on River Basin Management - Volume II. Zhengzhou, China: The Yellow River Conservancy Publishing House. pp.65-75.
Irrigation management ; Rice ; Crop yield ; Experiments ; Productivity ; Water balance / China / Kaifeng
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 YEL Record No: H033847)

4 Parsinejad, M.; Feng, Y.. 2003. Field evaluation and comparison of two models for simulation of soil-water dynamics. Irrigation and Drainage, 52(2):163-175.
Soil water ; Simulation models ; Soil-water-plant relationships ; Soil management ; Water balance
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H034011)

5 Shiratani, E.; Yoshinaga, I.; Feng, Y.; Hasebe, H. 2005. Water-environmentally conservation in reclaimed land. In ICID, Evaluation of draft ICID handbook on SDTA. Fourth International Workshop on Sustainable Development of Tidal Areas. 19th Congress and 56th IEC, International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage, Beijing, China, 13 September 2005, organized by Working Group on Sustainable Development of Tidal Areas in cooperation with Korean National Committee of ICID & Chinese National Committee of ICID. pp.74-79.
Paddy fields ; Wetlands ; Nitrogen ; Drainage
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 551.463 G000 ICI Record No: H037756)

6 Feng, L.; Bouman, B. A. M.; Tuong, T. P.; Li, Y.; Lu, G.; Cabangon, R. J.; Feng, Y.. 2006. Effects of groundwater depth and water-saving irrigation on rice yield and water balance in the Liuyuankou Irrigation System, Henan, China. In Willett, I. R.; Gao, Z. (Eds.) Agricultural water management in China: Proceedings of a workshop held in Beijing, China, 14 September 2005. Canberra, Australia: ACIAR. pp.52-66.
Water conservation ; Groundwater ; Irrigated farming ; Rice ; Simulation models ; Soil water ; Supplemental irrigation ; Water balance ; Irrigation systems / China / Liuyuankou Irrigation System / Henan / Kaifeng / Panlou Village / Yellow River
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7 G592 WIL Record No: H039221)

7 Grunwald, R.; Feng, Y.; Wang, W. 2020. Reconceptualization of the transboundary water interaction nexus (TWINS): approaches, opportunities and challenges. Water International, 45(5):458-478. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/02508060.2020.1780854]
International waters ; International cooperation ; Nexus ; Conflicts ; Water management ; Water resources ; Water governance ; Stakeholders ; Strategies ; Political aspects
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H050070)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H050070.pdf
(0.66 MB)
Using a critical hydropolitics approach, we broaden the context of the Transboundary Water Interaction Nexus framework to provide a tool to analyze interstate relations on the sideline of selected water-related issues regardless of the legal status of actors; distinguish nuances between six intensities of cooperation and conflict; and simultaneously evaluate water events as a form of cooperation, conflict, or both.

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