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Filter results3 paper(s) found. |
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1. Soil Organic Matter as it Relates to Soil Health and Plant NutritionTotal organic matter via loss on ignition is a standardized soil measurement in the North Central region. There is wide spread consensus that total organic matter is a very important indicator of the fertility of a soil, but how many farmers actually use total organic matter values from a soil test in an actionable way? An alternative approach would be to focus on the active fraction of organic matter. This is a small, but important pool that reflects the biologically available and rapidly... S. Culman |
2. Respiration as a Measure of Soil Health: Challenges and OpportunitiesIn recent years, respiration has become a commonly-used soil health metric. It has been used as a standalone predictor of soil N supplying capacity and in conjunction with other metrics to assess overall soil health. However, the sources of variation underlying respiration itself have not been thoroughly assessed. We show that across growing regions in California, respiration was unable to accurately predict soil N supply. The R2 values were much higher in fields that had received a recently-incorporated... J. Wade, S. Culman, T. Hurriso, W. Horwath, R. Miller |
3. Crop and Soil Response to Different Phosphorus Management ApproachesPhosphorus (P) management has implications for crop production and water quality issues in Ohio. Recent data from 457 field P trials conducted in Ohio reported less than 25% positive yield response to P fertilization. It warrants further evaluation of crop P uptake, soil P levels and environmental factors to improve the predictability of crop yield response. Therefore, we collected soil and plant data from three P fertilizer trials (Wooster, South Charleston, and Custar) established in 2006. These... M. Rakkar, L. Fleuridor, S. Culman, G. Labarge |