The Kellogg Biological Station Long-term Agroecosystem Research site (KBS LTAR) joined the national LTAR network in 2015 to represent a northeast portion of the North Central Region, extending across 76,000 km of southern Michigan and northern Indiana. Regional cropping systems are dominated by corn (Zea mays)-soybean (Glycine max) rotations managed with conventional tillage, industry-average rates of fertilizer and pesticide inputs uniformly applied, few cover crops, and little animal integration. In 2020, KBS LTAR initiated the Aspirational Cropping System Experiment as part of the LTAR Common Experiment, a co-production model wherein stakeholders and researchers collaborate to advance transformative change in agriculture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExcess nitrogen in water bodies is associated with a number of environmental problems, including hypoxia and eutrophication. Originating from anthropogenic activities such as fertilizer application, and influenced by watershed characteristics such as the structure of the drainage network, stream discharge, temperature, and soil moisture, factors influencing nitrogen transport and transformation are many and interconnected. This paper describes the development and application of a process-oriented nitrogen model based on the modeling framework of PAWS (Process-based Adaptive Watershed Simulator) that can describe coupled hydrologic, thermal and nutrient processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCover cropping is a common practice in U.S. Midwest carrot production for soil conservation, and may affect soil ecology and plant-parasitic nematodes-to which carrots are very susceptible.
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