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Guangdi Li

Researcher at Central South University

Publications -  165
Citations -  6032

Guangdi Li is an academic researcher from Central South University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pasture & Soil pH. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 164 publications receiving 4722 citations. Previous affiliations of Guangdi Li include Cooperative Research Centre & Massey University.

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Spatial variation in soil organic carbon and nitrogen at two field sites under crop and pasture rotations in southern New South Wales, Australia

TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimate the likely variance in soil organic carbon (OC) at the scale of farm fields or smaller monitoring areas is necessary for developing sampling protocols that allow temporal change to be detected.
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Leaf nitrogen and phosphorus resorption improves wheat grain yield in rotation with legume crops in south-eastern Australia

TL;DR: Under moisture stress conditions increased grain yield was associated with improved nutrient resorption efficiency via increased grain size regardless soil nutrient availability, and the NRE and PRE were positive correlated to grain yield and 1000-grain weight, but negative correlation to grain protein.
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Addressing biophysical constraints for Australian farmers applying low rates of composted dairy waste to soil

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the response of forage crops to composted dairy waste (compost) applied at low rates and investigated effects on soil health and the evenness of spreading compost by commercial machinery.
Posted ContentDOI

A framework for modelling financial risk in Southern Australia: the intensive farming (IF) model

TL;DR: In this article, the Intensive Farming (IF) model is used to simulate the whole-farm, 10-year cashflow for a typical 1,000 ha farm in the region, with a farming system based on dryland crops and breeding Merino sheep.
Posted ContentDOI

Economics of managing acid soils in dryland mixed cropping systems: comparing gross margins with whole-farm analysis derived using a business process model

TL;DR: Li et al. as mentioned in this paper compared the benefits of applying lime to acid soils when growing annual pasture, perennial pasture, and annual crops in rotations with annual or perennial pastures, providing the context for comparing methods of economic analysis.