The continued capacity of soil to be productive is essential to meeting the world’s needs for food and fiber. Producers in Washington State are keenly interested in managing their soils effectively. Specific industry needs as well as general soil-related constraints on productivity will require an investment in identifying farming practices that can replenish degraded soils and increase productivity. Efforts that focus on solving agricultural problems are most likely to produce changes in grower practices.
Metrics
209 File views/ downloads
382 Record Views
Details
Title
Soil quality investment priorities
Creators
Denise Bartlett (Author)
L. Carpenter-Boggs (Author)
D. Collins (Author)
L. duToit (Author)
David Granatstein (Author)
A. McGuire (Author)
Academic Unit
Plant Pathology, Department of; WSU Extension ANR; Crop and Soil Sciences, Department of
Identifiers
99900502782901842
Copyright
In copyright ; openAccess ; http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ; http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/OpenAccess