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1、lesson 1the history and the development of protected cultivation selected and rewritten from“the history and geography of the greenhouse”,by hzvi enoch and yaeln enoch,in greenhouse ecosystems20,echted by gstanhill and hzvi enoch,a series book of ecosystems ofthe world (li yaling,shanxi agricultural
2、 university) this lesson briefly describes the development of the greenhouse from antiquity to the present dayit includes a discussion of protected cropping in cold-and hot-frames,glass cloches,lean-to houses,winter gardens,orangeries,conservatories and glasshouses in their varied forms,and plastic-
3、clad plant enclosures of all sizes ranging from low tunnels,walk-in tunnels,to large plastic houses for the purpose of this lesson,the greenhouse is defined as a transparent enclosure designed to grow or temporarily protect plantsthus the definition does not include enclosures for growing mushrooms
4、or tissue cultures. in antiquity,however,there were probably no greenhouses in the sense defined here,but there were various practices adopted to provide out-of-season flowers and vegetables. the cultivation of out-of-season plants was intensely studied in ancient athens and romethis can be seen for
5、 instance in the work of theophrastus who lived from 372 to 287 bce (before the common era)he mentioned moving plants into the peristyle (verandah in a closed courtyard of a greek house) at night and heating soil by mixing it with decaying manure or compost. growers in china,mesopotamia,egypt,israel
6、,greece and rome grew valuable plants in pots and placed them indoors at night or during cold periods to protect themsometimes,plants were grown on wheelbarrdws that could easily be brought into a grotto,cellar or room at nightchinese plant culture may have included greenhouses that,according to tra
7、dition,go back to antiquitya chinese greenhouse(fig1-1 in the text book ) consisted of a brick wall oriented east-west. on its southernside, a transparent surface consisting of bamboo sticks covered with oiled paper was placed at an angle 30。-40。to the horizontalduring the day,the brick wall became
8、heated by the sun and at night it released its heatin addition,at night the paper window was covered by rush mats which acted as thermal insulation. similar simple greenhouses are in use today,and it is claimed that they increase the night temperature by up to 6 in the 20th century,in both northwest
9、ern europe and north america,there was a development from smaller to larger greenhouse units,usually even-span or ridge- and furrow multi-span housesthe use of small electrical motors allowed automated climate control, including the opening of ventsheating by thermo-siphon hot water circulation was
10、replaced by forced circulationelectrical pumps were used for irrigation and to operate shading systems,etc. lean-to glasshouse slowly became obsolete and heating by smoke flues disappeared in the first decades of the 20th centuryhowever,these changes all occurred very graduallyan example of this dev
11、elopment in the netherlands is outlined below simple over-winter sheds were used in aalsmeer,the netherlands,up to the 1920s, and store-frames,placed against the walls to protect vines in the westland region were photographed in 1928 at the beginning of the 20th century,90of the area used for protec
12、ted cultivation in the netherlands consisted of cold frames or hotbeds (heated by decomposition of manure and compost)by 1950,the area was still about 30,and in1964 it was 10 the use of dutch lights was introduced at the beginning of the 20th centuryinitially,only single-span frames were used;double
13、-light frames date from about 1920comparing the building practices in the netherlands with those in the more advanced united states,one sees that in 1904,90of the glass-covered area in the netherlands consisted of light frameswhile 25of the glass-covered area in the usa in the year 1900 was of prope
14、r glasshousesthe area under glass in the netherlands increased from 1.6 km2 in 1904 to 4.0 km2 in 1912,to 329 km2 in 1950,reaching 60.2 km2 in 1964 heating and carbon-dioxide fertilization of hotbed through the decomposition of mixtures of horse manure and plant residues was widely used in the nethe
15、rlands at the beginning of the last century,and remained the comltlon way for growing cucumbers and melons until horses were replaced by tractors in the years after the second world war claassen and hazeloop (1933)mentioned that at that time flue heaters were only used by a few growers in the nether
16、lands,whereas in belgium,most of the 4.40 km2 used for fruit-growing in 1939 was heated by fluesdutch greenhouses suitable for a variety of crops were developed gradually over half a centuryin 1900,at loosduinen,a steel-framed greenhouse was built which became the forerunner for the“venlo warenhuis”
17、,a house that could be used for different cropsthis glasshouse,first built in 1937,consists of large sheets of glass held within the grooves of the two sides of a separating narrow steel bar,permitting the maximum transmission of lightvenlo-type structures (fig1-2) were becoming popular in westland
18、of the netherlands in the 1950sburning natural gas for the supply of carbon dioxide to greenhouse crops began in the netherlands in 1961,following work done by jstender from the institute of horticultural engineering in wageningen,and became globally applied over the next decadeglossary1glass cloche
19、園藝用鐘形玻璃蓋(吊鐘形玻璃罩,一種通常呈鐘狀的罩子,主要用于保護植物避免嚴寒凍害)2cold-and hot-frame陽畦和溫床31ean-to house一面坡溫室,單屋面溫室4winter garden冬季花園(或菜園)5orangery柑橘溫室,橘園,養(yǎng)橘溫室(a sheltered place,especiallv a greenhouse,used for the cultivation of orange trees in cool climates)6conservatory溫室(a greenhouse。especially one in which plants are
20、arranged aesthetically for display,as at a botanical garden)7enclosure圍住,圍欄(四周有籬笆或圍墻的場地,這里指房屋);transparent enclosure透明房屋;plastic-clad plant enclosures塑料覆蓋的植物房子8tunnel拱棚;low tunnel小拱棚;walk-in tunnel 中拱棚;large plastichouse塑料大棚9tissue culture組織培養(yǎng)10out-of-season flowers and vegetables反季節(jié)的花卉和蔬菜11common e
21、ra基督時代與公元相符合的時期(the period coinciding with the christian era,可以縮寫為ce)12decaying manure or compost腐熟的農(nóng)家肥或堆肥13grotto洞穴,巖穴,人工洞室14cellar地窖,地下室15bamboo stick竹片,竹竿16oiled paper油紙17rush mat草席燈心草或類似物(通常是水生植物)如蒲草編制的席子18thermo-siphon熱虹吸,熱虹吸管19forced circulation強制循環(huán)20smoke flue煙道加熱管;flue咒煙洞,煙道,暖氣管;flue heater煙
22、道暖氣管,煙道加熱器21even-span等屋面的;single-span單跨;multi-span連跨,多跨22ndgeand furrow multi-span house嵴溝連跨溫室23store-frame貯藏室24dutch lights荷蘭土溫室(1ights在這里特指見光面)25double-light frame雙面進光骨架26km2平方千米(=square kilometer,lkm2=100ha)27hotbed溫床28aalsmeer荷蘭的一個地名(是世界著名的花卉拍賣中心所在地)29westland荷蘭西部地區(qū)(是溫室集中發(fā)展的區(qū)域,又名glass city)30ven
23、lo荷蘭的一個地名是荷蘭溫室venlo-type greenhouse(芬洛式溫室)的起源地31venlo warenhuis荷蘭語,英語應(yīng)為venlo warehouse32loosduinen荷蘭的一個地名33mesopotamia美索不達米亞(地名,位于西南亞地區(qū))questionsaplease answer the following questions in english 1how is the greenhouse defined according to this lesson? 2what does a chinese solar-greenhouse look like?
24、 3please describe the development of greenhouse cultivation in the netherlands 4could you please think about the development of greenhouse cultivation in china? 5please list protected facilities currently used in chinabplease translate the following paragraphs into english 1設(shè)施園藝是指在不適宜園藝作物生長發(fā)育的寒冷或炎熱季
25、節(jié),利用保溫、防寒或降溫、防雨設(shè)施,人為地創(chuàng)造適宜園藝作物生長發(fā)育的小氣候環(huán)境,使園藝作物的生產(chǎn)不受或少受自然季節(jié)的影響。由于其生產(chǎn)季節(jié)往往是在露地自然環(huán)境下難以生產(chǎn)的時節(jié),故又稱其為“反季節(jié)栽培”、“不時栽培”、“促成栽培”。 2風(fēng)障、陽畦、溫床、塑料棚及溫室可為露地和保護地培育各種蔬菜幼苗,或保護耐寒性蔬菜的幼苗越冬,以便提早定植,獲得早熟產(chǎn)品。 3從設(shè)施類型看,我國園藝設(shè)施栽培面積最大的是塑料拱棚和單屋面溫室,尤其是不加溫的節(jié)能型日光溫室,已經(jīng)成為我國溫室的主導(dǎo)類型。目前大型溫室或連棟溫室的發(fā)展也開始起步。the geographical distribution of the gree
26、nhousesselected and rewritten from“the history and geography of the greenhouse”,by hzvi enoch and yaeln enoch,in greenhouse ecosystems 20,edited by gstanhillandhzvi enoch,a series book of ecosystems of the world (li yaling,shanxi agricultural university) it is not simple to find reliable information
27、 about the world-wide area distribution of greenhousesthe total world-wide area was 43,143 ha (431 km2) in the 1970,s according to hanan et a1(1978);180,000 ha (1,800 km2) according to meiigaard (1995);265,800 ha (2,658 km2) greenhouses and high tunnels and 40700 ha (407 km2) glasshouses according t
28、o wittwer and castilla(1995) and 93570 ha (936 km2) greenhouses according to boulard (1996)wittwer (1993) estimated that there were 198,700 ha of plastic greenhouses and no less than 658,700 ha law tunnels and soil mulches in the worldthe area of greenhouses in individual countries is frequently not
29、ed,but the figure is typically the estimate of informed research, as for instance amiram(1987)and castilla and hernandez (1995)in the following,we have based our estimates on a survey made by a dutch horticultural marketing company,hortimarc bvamsterdam, in november 1995this shows the total world-wi
30、de area ogreenhouses to be currently about 800,000 ha(8,000 km0),or about 13 square meter per person in the worldobviouslymost of the worlds population(610persons)do use greenhouse droductsthe largest area of protected cultivation can be found in china,which has 600,000 ha(6,000 km2)or about three-q
31、uarters of the total global areanearlv allthe greenhouse area in china consists of simple plastic-clad houses,mostlv used for vegetable production around large citiesglasshouses in china are onlv used to a minor extent, mainly for researchthe second-largest area of greenhouses,42,000 ha (420 km2),is
32、 found in japan(53of world area),only 2,000 ha (20 km2) of which consists of glasshousesthis is followed by italy with 28,750 ha (287km2)(36),spain with 25,000 ha (250 km2) (32) and the netherlands with 10,100 ha (101 km2) (13),most of which is glasshouses thus,out of the total global greenhouse are
33、a,the bulk now consists of simple plastic houses,with the exception of a few european countries,such as the netherlands,italy,germany,france and denmark,in which a considerable proportion of protected cultivation still is in glasshousesthe general world-wide trend of the greenhouse ecosystem has thu
34、s gone full circle,from simple plant shelters,used two millennia ago,through complex and expensive glasshouses back to simple inexpensive plastic sheltersthe reason for this development can be found in the two alternatives to greenhouse cultivation by which the consumer can obtain out-of-season food
35、 and flower products,namely transport and storage the consumer requiring a year-round supply of fresh fruit,vegetables andflowers can be supplied either by: changing the climate of a greenhouse covered by plastic or glass; storing fruit, flowers and vegetable products after the normal harvest season
36、 until a later marketing date; transporting the product across climate zonesfrom where it grows naturally to where it is marketed all three altematives are in use at the presentthe greenhouse ecosystems of northwestern europe provide,at great cost,the climate changes needed to produce flowers(egrose
37、s) and vegetables(egtomatoes)in the winterconsumers can also receive the same goods by importing them from warmer countries some plant products,for instance carnation flowers,can be stored for prolonged periodsthe stored carnations are then marketed at a period when their price is high some crops ar
38、e grown outdoors and flown to their markets in other countries a typical example is orchidsa large proportion of the worlds orchid production is grown outdoors in thailand,harvested,and flown to their markets in japan,australia,europe and north americathere is no lack of knowledge about how to grow
39、orchids in heated greenhouses in those countries where they are marketed,but apparently it does not pay to produce them locallyroses are grown during the winter in israel and elsewhere along the south coast of the mediterranean,and sold in europe,exactly as roses from egypt competed with locally pro
40、duced flowers from protected cultivation in rome two millennia ago enoch (1978) analyzed these three options-that is climate change,storage,and transport over climate zones-and calculated their different energy expenditurescurrently,economic considerations and not energy optimizations are paramounti
41、f it is cheaper to produce field crops,or to store or transport products, then this will be done in preference to making the necessary climate changes within greenhouseseven if it is more expensive in energetic terms there is every reason to expect that in the future transport over climate zones and
42、 longer storage will become more efficient and thus cheaper,thereby decreasing the commercial importance of the greenhouse as an agricultural production system. howevergreenhouses will almost certainly survive for the same reasons that first favored their developmentnamely as a provider of luxuries
43、for the rich,for their aesthetic and recreational importance,and their role in botanical and ecosystem researchgiossary1informed research已有的研究2camation flower荷蘭石竹,康乃馨3energy expenditure能量支出,能量花費4in preference to優(yōu)先于5agricuitural production system農(nóng)業(yè)生產(chǎn)系統(tǒng)6orchid孢蘭,蘭花,淡紫色;砌淡紫色的questions1which countriesha
44、ve most of the protected cultivation in form of glasshouses?2what is the general world-wide trend of the greenhouse ecosystem? please give some reasons3what are the three options for supplying fresh vegetables and flowers year-round?4why can we assure that“greenhouses will almost certainly survive”?
45、5please give some information about the development and changes of protected cultivation from 1980s to the present in chinalesson 2goals of greenhouse climate controlselected and rewritten from climate and crop growth and development by h. challa in general principles of protected cultivation, sylla
46、bus of wageningen university (li yaling, shanxi agricultural university)the use of climate control can influence the most important above-ground growth factors. these factors are light, co2 concentration, temperature and air-humidity. the quantity of light is determined in most cases by the weather
47、conditions outside the greenhouse, although the use of shades or supplementary lighting allows the grower to control this to some extent. through the use of climate control, the grower has mote influence over the other factors. what are the most important goals in the control of greenhouse climate?
48、these can be summarized briefly:l high production;l optimal harvest planning;l optimal product quality;l risk management (prevention of calamities) ;l environmental goals (use of pesticides and energy) ;l optimal crop condition (on behalf of previously named goals) ;l cost management (energy, co2, l
49、abor).at the same time, one must also consider that protected cultivation is an economic activity. climate control must be seen within the framework of the total business situation. in this serme, climate control is always considered in relation to business goals, such as high production of good qua
50、lity products, at the right time, at an acceptable cost and acceptable risk, and with an environmental impact which is as limited as possible. climate control cannot be seen as separate from the crop, for which one tries to create optimal conditions. the crop plays a double role: it changes its surr
51、oundings and it reacts to them. as a result of evaporation, photosynthesis and respiration, the crop influences the mass balances of co2 and water vapor pressure of the air, as well as the energy balance. in controlling the production process, a distinction can be made between slow and fast-reacting
52、 processes. slow-reacting processes are, for example, leaf and flower development, morphogenesis, and dry matter accumulation and distribution. fast-reacting processes (several minutes or hours) include photosynthesis and transpiration. when sufficient attention is paid to managing the crop in the l
53、ong term (limiting conditions), the production rate is determined primarily by crop photosynthesis. this is determined largely by the amount of photosynthetic active radiation (par), to a lesser extent by the co2 concentration, and to only a small extent by temperature and air-humidity. however, the
54、se last two factors do have an indirect influence on the production via the crop condition. crop condition concerns a complex of properties which determine the capacity of the crop to deliver good production over an extended period. this is a property which is particularly important of the long cult
55、ivation periods, required by indeterminate crops (such as tomato and rose), and which is related to crop structure and crop vitality.due to its effect on the development of the crop, temperature plays an important role in crop planning. in addition, one must consider important qualitative effects of
56、 light (such as crop management through manipulation of day-length and light quality). for many crops, planning the time of harvest is an important criterion for controlling the climate, due to predictable price movements (for example, mothers day, easter etc. ), or with regard to general cultivatio
57、n planning (e.g. labor requirement) and contracts. product quality is such a broad concept that it is hardly possible to discuss it as part of this lesson. with regard to climate factors, however, it is certainly true that they must remain within certain limits in order to prevent problems with qual
58、ity, (table 2-1).these limits are often not absolute, but depend on the length and degree of exposure (comparable to dosage), and/or on the interplay with other climate factors. particularly with regard to ornamental crops, the margins of tolerance can be remarkably narrow, since flowering, the form of the plant or flower, the color etc. can be negatively influenced if the temperature does not remain within the optimal path.besides keepin
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