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Jaime Martinez-Valderrama
Jaime Martinez-Valderrama
Postdoctoral Fellow
Jaime Martínez-Valderrama is a PhD Engineer in Agriculture Engineering specialized in Desertification and Global Change with 20 years of experience in drylands: Southern Europe, Africa, Asia and South America. Since 2019 he has been working as a postdoc at the University of Alicante. He has participated in more than 20 research projects and has several publications in high impact journals. His main experience is related to the use of system dynamics models in the study of groundwater and rangelands.
University of Alicante

Public Documents 1
Unraveling misunderstandings about desertification: The paradoxical case of the Taber...
Jaime Martinez-Valderrama
Emilio Guirado

Jaime Martinez-Valderrama

and 2 more

March 10, 2020
From its origins, the concept of desertification has been controversial. The prevailing confusion between two desertification visions, one that considers it as the expansion of deserts and another that denotes its anthropogenic component, has been transferred to society. Here we illustrate misunderstandings about desertification using a very illustrative case from the Tabernas-Sorbas Basin (Almeria, Spain), where striking badlands that are often used as an image of desertification coexist with an intensive olive agriculture that is deteriorating irreversibly the only oasis in continental Europe, Los Molinos spring. The olive tree is a traditional Mediterranean dryland crop and until the 1950s only about 200 ha were irrigated. However, the profitability of the crop has caused irrigation to expand to 4,400 ha in the last two decades. The process of intensification has been reinforced giving way to super-intensive irrigation, which involves going from 210 to 1,550 trees/ha and that in a few years already occupies more than 1,500 ha. The effects on the water balance of the aquifer feeding these crops have been severe and the flow of the Los Molinos spring has gone from more than 40 L/s for the period 1970-2000 to the current 7.28 L/s. By unraveling the mechanisms of land degradation, we were able to detect its main drivers in the study area and, with them, to propose management actions to achieve a more sustainable use of resources and to combat desertification.

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