desert greening
0 sources
desert greening
Summary
desert greening is an afforestation[1]. It draws 188 Wikipedia views per month (afforestation category, ranking #3 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- desert greening is credited with the discovery of Seiei Tōyama[3].
- desert greening's image is recorded as Reforestación del desierto de Kubuqi, China.jpg[4].
- desert greening's instance of is recorded as afforestation[5].
- desert greening's instance of is recorded as revegetation[6].
- desert greening's location is recorded as desert[7].
- desert greening's subclass of is recorded as restoration ecology[8].
- desert greening's opposite of is recorded as desertification[9].
- desert greening's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09k63g8[10].
- desert greening's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Desert greening[11].
- desert greening's has effect is recorded as carbon sequestration[12].
- desert greening's BBC Things ID is recorded as 67cb8ba4-ecc2-40ae-b6f9-6b348fc64186[13].
- desert greening's uses is recorded as pioneer species[14].
- desert greening's uses is recorded as Acamptopappus shockleyi[15].
- desert greening's uses is recorded as Lepidium fremontii[16].
- desert greening's uses is recorded as halophyte[17].
- desert greening's uses is recorded as Salicornia[18].
- desert greening's uses is recorded as rainwater harvesting[19].
- desert greening's has goal is recorded as biodiversity[20].
- desert greening's has goal is recorded as sustainable agriculture[21].
- desert greening's has goal is recorded as forestry[22].
- desert greening's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Climate change[23].
- desert greening's model item is recorded as Green Wall of China[24].
- desert greening's model item is recorded as African Great Green Wall[25].
Body
Works and Contributions
desert greening is credited with the discovery of Seiei Tōyama[3].
Why It Matters
desert greening draws 188 Wikipedia views per month (afforestation category, ranking #3 of 3).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]