Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Rachel H. Wood"'
Publikováno v:
European Journal of Soil Biology. 87:72-79
The potential effect of herbicides on soil functions, including nitrogen (N) transformations, is of interest to farmers, advisers, regulators and the community, yet comparisons of herbicides with different modes of action in a range of soil types are
Publikováno v:
Biology and Fertility of Soils. 52:1085-1092
Legumes have been shown to improve the phosphorus (P) uptake and growth of subsequent cereals even when all legume residues (including roots) are removed, but the mechanism(s) responsible have not been elucidated. Further, this phenomenon has not bee
Publikováno v:
Industrial Crops and Products. 76:844-856
Tea tree (Melaleuca alternifolia) is native to south eastern Australia where it is also grown as a coppice crop in plantations to produce an essential oil used in medicinal, agricultural and cleaning products. Recent studies of disease and drought re
Publikováno v:
Acta Horticulturae. :119-126
Publikováno v:
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution. 63:327-337
Australian wild rice (Oryza sp.) diverged in isolation from the progenitors of cultivated rice millions of years ago and is likely to harbour novel alleles of value to rice breeding programs. Since the separation from Gondwana 100 MYA, Australia has
Publikováno v:
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment. 258:205
The authors regret that the reference provided in Table 1 (page 71) of Thapa et al 2016 is incorrect. The correct citation should be Thapa et al 2015: Thapa, R., Chatterjee, A., J.M.F., Johnson, J.M.F., Awale, R. 2015. Stabilized nitrogen fertilizers
Publikováno v:
Crop and Pasture Science. 66:864
Plantation-grown Melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree) is the principal source of tea tree oil in Australia. Upland and coastal ecotypes of tea tree were grown in a common environment to test responses in root, shoot and developmental attributes to four
Publikováno v:
Europe PubMed Central
Increasing evidence is emerging that enhanced efficiency nitrogen (N) fertilisers (EENFs) can lower nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from soils, but five recently published meta-analyses reported marginal benefits to agronomic efficiency (biomass or gra
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::9eb603d93b40ae79e52127aa84436cb7
http://europepmc.org/abstract/AGR/IND605843475
http://europepmc.org/abstract/AGR/IND605843475