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Registro completo
Provedor de dados:  AgEcon
País:  United States
Título:  "No-Till" Farming Is a Growing Practice
Autores:  Horowitz, John K.
Ebel, Robert M.
Ueda, Kohei
Data:  2010-11-15
Ano:  2010
Palavras-chave:  Tillage
No-till
Agricultural Resource Management Survey
ARMS
U.S. crop practices
National Resources Inventory-Conservation Effects Assessment Project
NRI-CEAP
Carbon baseline
Carbon sequestration
Environmental Economics and Policy
Farm Management
Land Economics/Use
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy
Risk and Uncertainty
Resumo:  Most U.S. farmers prepare their soil for seeding and weed and pest control through tillage—plowing operations that disturb the soil. Tillage practices affect soil carbon, water pollution, and farmers’ energy and pesticide use, and therefore data on tillage can be valuable for understanding the practice’s role in reaching climate and other environmental goals. In order to help policymakers and other interested parties better understand U.S. tillage practices and, especially, those practices’ potential contribution to climate-change efforts, ERS researchers compiled data from the Agricultural Resource Management Survey and the National Resources Inventory-Conservation Effects Assessment Project’s Cropland Survey. The data show that approximately 35.5 percent of U.S. cropland planted to eight major crops, or 88 million acres, had no tillage operations in 2009.
Tipo:  Report
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  http://purl.umn.edu/96636
Relação:  United States Department of Agriculture>Economic Research Service>Economic Information Bulletin
Economic Information Bulletin
Number 70
Formato:  22
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