Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Nicolas E Quintana Ashwell"'
Publikováno v:
Agricultural Water Management, Vol 300, Iss , Pp 108907- (2024)
Field level data from a voluntary water use reporting program in the Delta region of Mississippi (MS), USA, provides empirical evidence that crop growers increase the amount of groundwater pumped for irrigation during periods of high temperature (deg
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/81e33babcaa64399b761743e63ade613
Publikováno v:
Land, Vol 11, Iss 11, p 1925 (2022)
The challenge of a depleting Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer (MRVAA) requires reducing groundwater withdrawal for irrigation, increasing aquifer recharge, and protecting water quality for sustainable water use. To meet the challenge, the Na
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/d751b41de39d4d0c926950dfe5f04fe0
Autor:
Bhupinder Singh, Gurpreet Kaur, Nicolas E. Quintana-Ashwell, Gurbir Singh, Tsz Him Lo, Kelly A. Nelson
Publikováno v:
Agricultural Water Management. 277:108087
Autor:
Anna T. Maher, Nicolas E. Quintana Ashwell, John A. Tanaka, John P. Ritten, Kristie A. Maczko
Publikováno v:
Journal of Environmental Management. 329:116420
Autor:
Nicolas E Quintana Ashwell, Anna T. Maher, Matthew C. Reeves, John A. Tanaka, David T. Taylor, Kristie A. Maczko
Publikováno v:
Translational Animal Science.
Beef cattle ranching and farming is a major agricultural industry in the U.S. that manages an estimated 147 million ha of private land and uses approximately 92% of forage authorized for grazing on federal rangelands. Rangelands, as working landscape
Autor:
Anna T, Maher, Nicolas E, Quintana Ashwell, Kristie A, Maczko, David T, Taylor, John A, Tanaka, Matt C, Reeves
Publikováno v:
Translational Animal Science
Beef cattle ranching and farming is a major agricultural industry in the United States that manages an estimated 147 million ha of private land and uses approximately 92% of forage authorized for grazing on federal rangelands. Rangelands, as working
Publikováno v:
Water Economics and Policy. :1550004
We examine the effects of irrigation technology subsidies using a model of inter-temporal common pool groundwater use with substitutable technology and declining yields from groundwater stocks, where pumping cost and stock externalities arise from th