Research Topics
| Rodney T VentereaSummaryAffiliation: University of Minnesota Country: USA Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Simplified method for quantifying theoretical underestimation of chamber-based trace gas fluxesRodney T Venterea
USDA ARS, Soil and Water Research Management Unit, 1991 Upper Buford Cir, 439 Borlaug Hall, St Paul, MN 55108, USA
J Environ Qual 39:126-35. 2010..The method described here provides a practical means of improving the absolute accuracy of flux estimates and normalizing data obtained using different chamber designs in different soils...
Nitrogen oxide and methane emissions under varying tillage and fertilizer managementRodney T Venterea
USDA ARS, Soil and Water Management Unit, 1991 Upper Buford Circle, St Paul, MN 55108, USA
J Environ Qual 34:1467-77. 2005....
Fertilizer management effects on nitrate leaching and indirect nitrous oxide emissions in irrigated potato productionRodney T Venterea
USDA ARS, Soil and Water Management Research Unit, St Paul, MN, USA
J Environ Qual 40:1103-12. 2011..Thus, our results also demonstrate how more robust models are needed to account for off-site conversion of NO to NO, since current emission factor models have an enormous degree of uncertainty...
Fertilizer source and tillage effects on yield-scaled nitrous oxide emissions in a corn cropping systemRodney T Venterea
USDA ARS, Soil and Water Management Unit, Paul, MN 55108, USA
J Environ Qual 40:1521-31. 2011..Thus, in this cropping system and climate regime, production of an equivalent amount of grain using NT would generate substantially more N₂O compared with CT...
Broadcast urea reduces N2O but increases NO emissions compared with conventional and shallow-applied anhydrous ammonia in a coarse-textured soilRyosuke Fujinuma
USDA ARS, St Paul, MN, USA
J Environ Qual 40:1806-15. 2011..These results provide additional evidence that AA emits more NO, but less NO, than broadcast urea and show that practices to reduce NO emissions do not always improve N use efficiency...
Profile analysis and modeling of reduced tillage effects on soil nitrous oxide fluxRodney T Venterea
USDA ARS, Soil and Water Research Management Unit, 1991 Upper Buford Cir, 439 Borlaug Hall, St Paul, MN 55108, USA
J Environ Qual 37:1360-7. 2008..These results suggest that N(2)O fluxes from RT systems can be minimized by subsurface fertilizer placement and by using a chemical form of fertilizer that does not promote substantial NO(2)(-) accumulation...
