The Interplay Between Bioenergy Grass Production and Water Resources in the United States of America.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Atul K. Jain | Ximing Cai | Yang Song | Haroon S. Kheshgi | H. Kheshgi | Ximing Cai | W. Landuyt | Yang Song | M. Cervarich | William Landuyt | Matthew Cervarich
[1] Douglas A. Miller,et al. A Conterminous United States Multilayer Soil Characteristics Dataset for Regional Climate and Hydrology Modeling , 1998 .
[2] Ning Zeng,et al. Seasonal cycle and interannual variability in the Amazon hydrologic cycle , 1999 .
[3] C. W. Wood,et al. Impacts of soil management on root characteristics of switchgrass , 2000 .
[4] J. Scurlock,et al. The development and current status of perennial rhizomatous grasses as energy crops in the US and Europe , 2003 .
[5] Qing Liu. land surface modeling with enhanced consideration of soil hydraulic properties and terrestrial ecosystems , 2004 .
[6] J. D. Tarpley,et al. The multi‐institution North American Land Data Assimilation System (NLDAS): Utilizing multiple GCIP products and partners in a continental distributed hydrological modeling system , 2004 .
[7] F. J. Barnes,et al. Interrelationships between plant functional types and soil moisture heterogeneity for semiarid landscapes within the grassland/forest continuum: a unified conceptual model , 2004, Landscape Ecology.
[8] V. R. Tolbert,et al. Runoff, sediment, nitrogen, and phosphorus losses from agricultural land converted to sweetgum and switchgrass bioenergy feedstock production in north Alabama. , 2006 .
[9] K. Caldeira,et al. Combined climate and carbon-cycle effects of large-scale deforestation , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[10] R. Service. Biofuel Researchers Prepare to Reap a New Harvest , 2007, Science.
[11] M. Al‐Kaisi,et al. Cropping Systems effects on improving Soil Carbon Stocks of exposed Subsoil , 2007 .
[12] R. Perlack,et al. Exploring Potential U.S. Switchgrass Production for Lignocellulosic Ethanol , 2008 .
[13] Philip W. Gassman,et al. Impact of land use and land cover change on the water balance of a large agricultural watershed: Historical effects and future directions , 2008 .
[14] Stephen P. Long,et al. Meeting US biofuel goals with less land: the potential of Miscanthus , 2008 .
[15] S. Davis,et al. Life-cycle analysis and the ecology of biofuels. , 2009, Trends in plant science.
[16] J. Ditomaso,et al. Tolerance of switchgrass to extreme soil moisture stress: Ecological implications , 2009 .
[17] Atul K. Jain,et al. Integration of nitrogen cycle dynamics into the Integrated Science Assessment Model for the study of terrestrial ecosystem responses to global change , 2009 .
[18] Atul K. Jain,et al. Nitrogen attenuation of terrestrial carbon cycle response to global environmental factors , 2009 .
[19] John R. Williams,et al. Simulating Potential Switchgrass Production in the United States , 2009 .
[20] F. Dohleman,et al. Does greater leaf-level photosynthesis explain the larger solar energy conversion efficiency of Miscanthus relative to switchgrass? , 2009, Plant, cell & environment.
[21] K. Ro,et al. The potential impacts of biomass feedstock production on water resource availability. , 2010, Bioresource technology.
[22] Raghavan Srinivasan,et al. Progress toward evaluating the sustainability of switchgrass as a bioenergy crop using the SWAT model. , 2010 .
[23] Fernando E. Miguez,et al. Modeling Miscanthus in the soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) to simulate its water quality effects as a bioenergy crop. , 2010, Environmental science & technology.
[24] Carl J. Bernacchi,et al. The impacts of Miscanthus×giganteus production on the Midwest US hydrologic cycle , 2010 .
[25] G. McIsaac,et al. Miscanthus and switchgrass production in central Illinois: impacts on hydrology and inorganic nitrogen leaching. , 2010, Journal of environmental quality.
[26] Carl J. Bernacchi,et al. A comparison of canopy evapotranspiration for maize and two perennial grasses identified as potential bioenergy crops , 2010 .
[27] H. Jager,et al. Empirical geographic modeling of switchgrass yields in the United States , 2010 .
[28] Ximing Cai,et al. Land availability for biofuel production. , 2011, Environmental science & technology.
[29] Kees Klein Goldewijk,et al. The HYDE 3.1 spatially explicit database of human‐induced global land‐use change over the past 12,000 years , 2011 .
[30] Comment on "Modeling miscanthus in the soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) to simulate its water quality effects as a bioenergy crop". , 2011, Environmental science & technology.
[31] M. Rietkerk,et al. Ecohydrological advances and applications in plant-water relations research: a review , 2011 .
[32] Christopher B Field,et al. Direct climate effects of perennial bioenergy crops in the United States , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[33] Darren T. Drewry,et al. Implications for the hydrologic cycle under climate change due to the expansion of bioenergy crops in the Midwestern United States , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[34] Yonas Demissie,et al. Assessing regional hydrology and water quality implications of large-scale biofuel feedstock production in the Upper Mississippi River Basin. , 2012, Environmental science & technology.
[35] J. Machet,et al. Nutrient requirements of Miscanthus x giganteus: Conclusions from a review of published studies , 2012 .
[36] Atul K. Jain,et al. Three distinct global estimates of historical land-cover change and land-use conversions for over 200 years , 2012, Frontiers of Earth Science.
[37] Shuguang Liu,et al. Impacts of biofuels production alternatives on water quantity and quality in the Iowa River Basin , 2012 .
[38] M. Z. Hussain,et al. Altered Belowground Carbon Cycling Following Land-Use Change to Perennial Bioenergy Crops , 2013, Ecosystems.
[39] Shuguang Liu,et al. Identifying potential areas for biofuel production and evaluating the environmental effects: a case study of the James River Basin in the Midwestern United States , 2012 .
[40] Carl J. Bernacchi,et al. A Regional Comparison of Water Use Efficiency for Miscanthus, Switchgrass and Maize , 2012 .
[41] Fernando E. Miguez,et al. Modeling spatial and dynamic variation in growth, yield, and yield stability of the bioenergy crops Miscanthus × giganteus and Panicum virgatum across the conterminous United States , 2012 .
[42] M. Sanderson,et al. Water Use Efficiency by Switchgrass Compared to a Native Grass or a Native Grass Alfalfa Mixture , 2013, BioEnergy Research.
[43] Stephen J. Del Grosso,et al. Impact of second‐generation biofuel agriculture on greenhouse‐gas emissions in the corn‐growing regions of the US , 2012 .
[44] Shuguang Liu,et al. Projecting the land cover change and its environmental impacts in the Cedar River Basin in the Midwestern United States , 2013 .
[45] Min Chen,et al. Biofuel, land and water: maize, switchgrass or Miscanthus? , 2013 .
[46] T. Juenger,et al. Spatial forecasting of switchgrass productivity under current and future climate change scenarios. , 2013, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.
[47] D. Bransby,et al. Nitrogen use in switchgrass grown for bioenergy across the USA , 2013 .
[48] C. Bernacchi,et al. Reduced nitrogen losses after conversion of row crop agriculture to perennial biofuel crops. , 2013, Journal of environmental quality.
[49] Water use efficiency of perennial and annual bioenergy crops in central Illinois. , 2013 .
[50] Andrei P. Sokolov,et al. Climate impacts of a large‐scale biofuels expansion , 2013 .
[51] Thomas B. Voigt,et al. Nitrogen Fertilization Does Significantly Increase Yields of Stands of Miscanthus × giganteus and Panicum virgatum in Multiyear Trials in Illinois , 2013, BioEnergy Research.
[52] Atul K. Jain,et al. Implementation of dynamic crop growth processes into a land surface model: evaluation of energy, water and carbon fluxes under corn and soybean rotation , 2013 .
[53] R. Kolka,et al. Topographic and soil influences on root productivity of three bioenergy cropping systems. , 2013, The New phytologist.
[54] Atul K. Jain,et al. Climate‐driven uncertainties in modeling terrestrial energy and water fluxes: a site‐level to global‐scale analysis , 2014, Global change biology.
[55] Murugesu Sivapalan,et al. An integrated modeling framework for exploring flow regime and water quality changes with increasing biofuel crop production in the U.S. Corn Belt , 2014 .
[56] Atul K. Jain,et al. Climate‐driven uncertainties in modeling terrestrial gross primary production: a site level to global‐scale analysis , 2014, Global change biology.
[57] Estimates of Biomass Yield for Perennial Bioenergy Grasses in the USA , 2015, BioEnergy Research.
[58] V. Kakani,et al. Growing season variability in evapotranspiration, ecosystem water use efficiency, and energy partitioning in switchgrass , 2014 .
[59] Praveen Kumar,et al. Threshold dynamics in soil carbon storage for bioenergy crops. , 2014, Environmental science & technology.
[60] Q. Zhuang,et al. Estimating Water Use Efficiency in Bioenergy Ecosystems Using a Process‐Based Model , 2014 .
[61] Housen Chu,et al. Evapotranspiration of annual and perennial biofuel crops in a variable climate , 2015 .
[62] T. Voigt,et al. Effect of nitrogen addition on Miscanthus × giganteus yield, nitrogen losses, and soil organic matter across five sites , 2015 .
[63] R. Jackson,et al. Nitrogen conservation decreases with fertilizer addition in two perennial grass cropping systems for bioenergy , 2015 .
[64] M. Z. Hussain,et al. Comparative water use by maize, perennial crops, restored prairie, and poplar trees in the US Midwest , 2015 .