Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 30
pro vyhledávání: '"C. H. Burmester"'
Autor:
Andrew J. Price, Glenn Wehtje, James D. McCurdy, C. H. Burmester, Jordan M. Toombs, Joyce Tredaway Ducar, Michael L. Flessner, J. Scott McElroy
Publikováno v:
Weed Technology. 29:633-640
The development and spread of glyphosate-resistant (GR) horseweed has increased the use of dicamba as an alternative herbicide treatment. Research evaluated suspected glyphosate-resistant horseweed populations from DeKalb (GR-1) and Cherokee (GR-2) c
Autor:
L. Thomas Barber, C. H. Burmester, Keith L. Edmisten, Daniel O. StephensonIV, Jared R. Whitaker, Deborah L. Boykin, Darrin M. Dodds, Guy D. Collins, Christopher L. Main
Publikováno v:
Weed Technology. 29:665-674
Field studies were conducted in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Tennessee during 2010 and 2011 to determine the effect of glufosinate application rate on LibertyLink and WideStrike cotton. Glufosinate was appli
Autor:
C. H. Burmester, Kipling S. Balkcom
Publikováno v:
Agronomy Journal. 107:425-434
Alabama wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) farmers are changing management practices, which include using higher N fertilizer rates and planting wheat with no-tillage or other conservation tillage systems to maximize yields. Experiments were conducted to (
Subsurface Drip Irrigation Placement and Cotton Irrigation Water Requirement in the Tennessee Valley
Autor:
Hugh D. Harkins, Mark Dougherty, C. H. Burmester, AbdelAziz H. AbdelGadir, John P. Fulton, Edzard van Santen, Larry M. Curtis, B. E. Norris
Publikováno v:
Crop Management. 10:1-10
Fluctuations in dryland cotton yield in the Tennessee Valley region of northern Alabama are common and are usually related to irregular drought periods during the growing season. Subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) has gained popularity as a water deliv
Publikováno v:
Soil Science Society of America Journal. 72:1330-1336
More than 70% of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) grown in the Tennessee Valley of northern Alabama is produced using conservation tillage systems with cereal cover crops. The resulting decreased N effi ciency requires development of new N fertilizer r
Publikováno v:
Soil Science Society of America Journal. 72:1321-1329
Nitrogen is required for adequate residue production from cereal cover crops used in no-till cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) production, but residues can immobilize N needed by cotton. We conducted a 3-yr field study on a Decatur silt loam (clayey, ka
Autor:
Andrew J. Price, Glenn Wehtje, C. H. Burmester, C. Dale Monks, Marshall R. Woods, Wilson H. Faircloth, Michael G. Patterson, Dennis P. Delaney
Publikováno v:
Weed Technology. 21:915-921
Field experiments were conducted in Alabama during 1999 and 2000 to test the hypothesis that any glyphosate-induced yield suppression in glyphosate-resistant cotton would be less with irrigation than without irrigation. Yield compensation was monitor
Publikováno v:
Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis. 38:2831-2847
The impact of conservation tillage, crop rotation, and cover cropping on soil‐quality indicators was evaluated in a long‐term experiment for cotton. Compared to conventional‐tillage cotton, other treatments had 3.4 to 7.7 Mg ha−1 more carbon
Publikováno v:
Applied Engineering in Agriculture. 21:337-343
For those soils that require deep tillage to alleviate soil compaction, subsoiling can be an expensive and time-consuming tillage event. Alternative tillage methods are needed which conserve natural resources without sacrificing cotton yields. An exp
Publikováno v:
Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 35:1693-1703
Soil management practices affect soil microbial communities, which in turn influence soil ecosystem processes. In this study, the effects of conventional- (fall disking, chiseling and spring disking, field cultivation) and no-tillage practices on soi