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Elsy Akkari

Researcher at Rothamsted Research

Publications -  5
Citations -  188

Elsy Akkari is an academic researcher from Rothamsted Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil structure & Soil water. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 106 citations.

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Land-use influences phosphatase gene microdiversity in soils

TL;DR: Predicted extracellular ecotypes were distributed across a greater range of soil structure than predicted intracellular ecotype, suggesting that microbial communities subject to the dual stresses of low nutrient availability and reduced access to organic material in bare fallowed soils rely upon the action of exoenzymes.
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Effects of cropping systems upon the three-dimensional architecture of soil systems are modulated by texture.

TL;DR: Data reveal profound effects of different agricultural management systems upon soil structural modification, which are strongly modulated by the extent of plant presence and also contingent on the inherent texture of the soil.
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Phylogenetic distribution, biogeography and the effects of land management upon bacterial non-specific Acid phosphatase Gene diversity and abundance

TL;DR: New insight is generated into the environmental distribution of NSAPs and their potential global relevance to cycling of organic phosphorus is established, with a clear effect of land management upon gene abundance identified.
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The effects of long-term fertilizations on soil hydraulic properties vary with scales.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used X-ray computed tomography (X-ray) images of the Rothamsted long-term wheat experiment (since 1843) in the UK.
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Significant structural evolution of a long‐term fallow soil in response to agricultural management practices requires at least 10 years after conversion

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how the physical structure of a compromised soil, arising from long-term bare-fallow management, was modified by adopting different field management practices.