All Stories

  1. Environmental factors function as constraints on soil nitrous oxide fluxes in bioenergy feedstock cropping systems
  2. Diverse lignocellulosic feedstocks can achieve high field-scale ethanol yields while providing flexibility for the biorefinery and landscape-level environmental benefits
  3. Perennialization and Cover Cropping Mitigate Soil Carbon Loss from Residue Harvesting
  4. Plant community composition influences fine root production and biomass allocation in perennial bioenergy cropping systems of the upper Midwest, USA
  5. A Lipid Extraction and Analysis Method for Characterizing Soil Microbes in Experiments with Many Samples
  6. Biomass Production a Stronger Driver of Cellulosic Ethanol Yield than Biomass Quality
  7. Inhibition of microbial biofuel production in drought-stressed switchgrass hydrolysate
  8. Bioenergy cropping systems that incorporate native grasses stimulate growth of plant-associated soil microbes in the absence of nitrogen fertilization
  9. Nitrogen Fertilization Effects on Productivity and Nitrogen Loss in Three Grass-Based Perennial Bioenergy Cropping Systems
  10. Does Plant Biomass Manipulation in Static Chambers Affect Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Soils?
  11. Comparative productivity of alternative cellulosic bioenergy cropping systems in the North Central USA
  12. Controlling microbial contamination during hydrolysis of AFEX-pretreated corn stover and switchgrass: effects on hydrolysate composition, microbial response and fermentation
  13. Management flexibility of a grassland agroecosystem: A modeling approach based on viability theory
  14. Nitrous oxide emissions during establishment of eight alternative cellulosic bioenergy cropping systems in the North Central United States
  15. Nitrous oxide emissions from cool-season pastures under managed grazing
  16. Grazing in an Uncertain Environment: Modeling the Trade-Off between Production and Robustness
  17. Measurement of Greenhouse Gas Flux from Agricultural Soils Using Static Chambers
  18. Livestock Management Strategy Affects Net Ecosystem Carbon Balance of Subhumid Pasture
  19. Subhumid pasture soil microbial communities affected by presence of grazing, but not grazing management
  20. Management-Intensive Rotational Grazing Enhances Forage Production and Quality of Subhumid Cool-Season Pastures
  21. Grazing removal decreases the magnitude of methane and the variability of nitrous oxide emissions from spring-fed wetlands of a California oak savanna
  22. Spring-water Nitrate Increased with Removal of Livestock Grazing in a California Oak Savanna
  23. Long-term grazing study in spring-fed wetlands reveals management tradeoffs