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Artemi Cerdà

Researcher at University of Valencia

Publications -  399
Citations -  22358

Artemi Cerdà is an academic researcher from University of Valencia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Surface runoff & Soil water. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 377 publications receiving 17821 citations. Previous affiliations of Artemi Cerdà include Bar-Ilan University & University of Amsterdam.

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Preface: Environmental benefits of biochar

TL;DR: Paz-Ferreiro et al. as discussed by the authors, A.M. Tarquis, A.J. Gasco, M.T.Cerda, E.I.S.S., M.M Mendez, A., A.Tarquis and A.G.
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Islands of biogeodiversity in arid lands on a polygons map study: Detecting scale invariance patterns from natural resources maps

TL;DR: This study revealed areas that need to be revisited and studied pedologically, and these edaphophylous map units tend to be islands of biodiversity that are threatened by anthropogenic activity in the region.
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Quantifying Soil Compaction in Persimmon Orchards Using ISUM (Improved Stock Unearthing Method) and Core Sampling Methods

TL;DR: In this article, the improved stock unearthing method (ISUM) was used to characterize the changes in soil compaction in a representative persimmon orchard in Eastern Spain, where undisturbed soil samples using metallic core rings were collected at different soil depths between 45 paired-trees, and topographic variations were determined following the protocol established by ISUM.
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Weed cover controls soil and water losses in rainfed olive groves in Sierra de Enguera, eastern Iberian Peninsula.

TL;DR: In this article, a weed cover (CW) treatment is tested at an olive tree plantation that has undergone conventional mechanical tillage for 20 years and results were compared against an adjacent control plantation that maintained tillage as a weed control strategy (CO).
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The use of Easy-Barriers to control soil and water losses in fire-affected land in Quesada, Andalusia, Spain.

TL;DR: Evaluated the effectiveness of a new barrier which can be applied on steep terrains affected by wildfires, which allow us to save between 30 and 40% of total restoration costs in comparison with traditional barriers, due to the reduction in labour costs.