Journal Article

Soil aggregation and glomalin under pastures in the Southern Piedmont USA

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Publisher: 
Soil Science Society of America Journal
Year: 
2000
Authors: 
Franzluebbers AJ, Wright SF, Stuedemann JA
Volume: 
64
Issue: 
3
Pagination: 
1018-1026

Four-decade responses of soil trace elements to an aggrading old-field forest: B, Mn, Zn, Cu, and Fe

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Author: 
Li, Jianwei
Publisher: 
Ecology
Year: 
2009
Authors: 
Li, J.W., D. deB. Richter, A. Mendoza, and P. Heine
Volume: 
89
Issue: 
10
Pagination: 
2911-2923

Porewater chemistry of natural and created marsh soils

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Publisher: 
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
Year: 
1991
Authors: 
C.B. Craft, E.D. Seneca and S.W. Broome

Twenty five years of ecosystem development of constructed Spartina alterniflora (Loisel) marshes

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Publisher: 
Ecological Applications
Year: 
1999
Authors: 
C. Craft, J. Reader, J.N. Sacco and S.W. Broome

Will photosynthesis of maize (Zea mays) in the US Corn Belt increase in future [CO2] rich atmospheres? An analysis of diurnal courses of CO2 uptake under free-air concentration enrichment (FACE)

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Author: 
Ort, Don
Publisher: 
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Year: 
2004
Authors: 
Leakey ADB, Bernacchi CJ, Dohleman FG, Ort DR, Long SP
ISBN_ISSN: 
1354-1013
Volume: 
10
Issue: 
6
Pagination: 
951-962
DOI: 
10.1111/j.1365-2486.2004.00767.x
Abstract: 
The C-4 grass Zea mays (maize or corn) is the third most important food crop globally in terms of production and demand is predicted to increase 45% from 1997 to 2020. However, the effects of rising [CO2] upon C-4 plants, and Z. mays specifically, are not sufficiently understood to allow accurate predictions of future crop production. A rainfed, field experiment utilizing free-air concentration enrichment (FACE) technology in the primary area of global corn production (US Corn Belt) was undertaken to determine the effects of elevated [CO2] on corn. FACE technology allows experimental treatments to be imposed upon a complete soil-plant-atmosphere continuum with none of the effects of experimental enclosures on plant microclimate. Crop performance was compared at ambient [CO2] (354 mu mol mol(-1)) and the elevated [CO2] (549 mumol mol(-1)) predicted for 2050. Previous laboratory studies suggest that under favorable growing conditions C-4 photosynthesis is not typically enhanced by elevated [CO2]. However, stomatal conductance and transpiration are decreased, which can indirectly increase photosynthesis in dry climates. Given the deep soils and relatively high rainfall of the US Corn Belt, it was predicted that photosynthesis would not be enhanced by elevated [CO2]. The diurnal course of gas exchange of upper canopy leaves was measured in situ across the growing season of 2002. Contrary to the prediction, growth at elevated [CO2] significantly increased leaf photosynthetic CO2 uptake rate (A) by up to 41%, and 10% on average. Greater A was associated with greater intercellular [CO2], lower stomatal conductance and lower transpiration. Summer rainfall during 2002 was very close to the 50-year average for this site, indicating that the year was not atypical or a drought year. The results call for a reassessment of the established view that C-4 photosynthesis is insensitive to elevated [CO2] under favorable growing conditions and that the production potential of corn in the US Corn Belt will not be affected by the global rise in [CO2].

Twenty five years of ecosystem development of constructed Spartina alterniflora marshes

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Publisher: 
Ecological Applications
Year: 
1999
Authors: 
C.B. Craft, J. Reader, J.N. Sacco and S.W. Broome

Fifteen years of vegetation and soil development after brackish-water marsh creation

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Publisher: 
Restoration Ecology
Year: 
2002
Authors: 
C.B. Craft, S.W. Broome and C.L. Campbell
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