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J.W. van Groenigen

Researcher at Wageningen University and Research Centre

Publications -  75
Citations -  6103

J.W. van Groenigen is an academic researcher from Wageningen University and Research Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Fertilizer. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 66 publications receiving 5272 citations. Previous affiliations of J.W. van Groenigen include International Institute of Minnesota & University of California, Riverside.

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Towards an agronomic assessment of N2O emissions: a case study for arable crops

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis on yield-scaled N2O emissions by nonleguminous annual crops (19 independent studies and 147 data points) revealed that N 2O emissions were smallest at application rates of approximately 180-190 kg N ha-1 and increased sharply after that.
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Trends in Global Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Animal Production Systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss trends and uncertainties in global N2O emission from animal waste and discuss possible mitigation strategies, on the basis of literature data and results of simple calculations.
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Constrained optimisation of soil sampling for minimisation of the kriging variance

TL;DR: In this article, an extended Spatial Simulated Annealing (SSA) method was introduced to optimise spatial sampling schemes for obtaining the minimal kriging variance. But the sampling schemes are optimized at the point level.
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Diet effects on urine composition of cattle and N2O emissions.

TL;DR: Major dietary strategies to mitigating N2O emission from cattle operations include reducing dietary N content or increasing energy content, and increasing dietary mineral content to increase urine volume.
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Biochar application does not improve the soil hydrological function of a sandy soil

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of biochar on soil hydrological characteristics was studied in two separate field experiments on a sandy soil in The Netherlands and the results indicated that, in addition to characterising pore space, biochars should be analyzed for hydrophobicity when assessing their potential for improving soil physical properties.