Search Results - "Indonesia"

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  1. Machismo de la soya: estado actual. by Granada Chaparro, Gustavo A.

    Published 2018
    “…Se informa que síntomas similares a los del machismo se han descrito en Japón, Indonesia y Brasil para la enfermedad Escoba de Bruja (superpoblamiento o proliferación excesiva de ramas) de la soya. …”
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    Capítulo de libro
  2. El manejo integrado de las plagas principales en el cultivo de la yuca by Bellotti, A.C.

    Published 2018
    “….: Camerún, Nigeria, Uganda)y Asia (ej.: India, Indonesia, China, Tailandia) han realizado considerables esfuerzos investigativos sobre el cultivo y el empleo de plagas asociadas (Bellotti ef. a/.,1999). …”
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    paper
  3. Fortalecimiento de una plataforma nacional de alta tecnología para el desarrollo del programa de agrobioprospección by Cruz Martínez, Carolina, Rodríguez, Fernando, Santamaría, Marjorie, Jaramillo, Sonia, Cotes, Alba Marina

    Published 2018
    “…Las economías del grupo CIVETS, integrado por Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egipto, Turquía y Sudáfrica (Allen, 2011) tienen características comunes como: diversidad de exportaciones, su riqueza se basa en recursos naturales y productos primarios, localización geopolítica estratégica y aumento considerable de la inversión extranjera directa. …”
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    Capítulo de libro
  4. A global map of mangrove forest soil carbon at 30m spatial resolution by Sanderma, Jonathan, Hengl, Tomislav, Fiske, Greg, Solvik, Kylen, Adame, Maria Fernanda, Benson, Lisa, Bukoski, Jacob J., Carnell, Paul, Cifuentes Jara, Miguel, Donato, Daniel, Duncan, Clare, Eid, Ebrahem M., Ermgassen, Philine zu, Ewers Lewis, Carolyn J., Macreadie, Peter I, Glass, Leach, Gress, Selena, Jardine, Sunny L., Jones, Trevor G., Rahman, MD Mizanur, Sanders, Christian J., Spalding, Mark, Landis, Emily

    Published 2019
    “…By utilizing remotely-sensed mangrove forest cover change data, loss of soil carbon due to mangrove habitat loss between 2000 and 2015 was 30–122 Tg C with >75% of this loss attributable to Indonesia, Malaysia and Myanmar. The resulting map products from this work are intended to serve nations seeking to include mangrove habitats in payment-for- ecosystem services projects and in designing effective mangrove conservation strategies.…”
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    Artículo
  5. Soil greenhouse gas emissions from inorganic fertilisers and recycled oil palm waste products on Indonesian oil palm plantations by Rahman, Niharika, Brunn, Thilde Bech, Giller, Kenneth E., Magid, Jakob, Ven, Gerrie W. van de, Neergaard, Andreas de

    Published 2019
    “…This study reports the results of yearlong field‐based measurements of soil N2O (nitrous oxide) and CH4 emissions from commercial plantations in North Sumatra, Indonesia. One experiment investigated the effects of soil‐water saturation on N2O and CH4 emissions across inorganic fertilisers and organic amendments by simulating 25 mm rainfall per day for 21 days. …”
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    Journal Article
  6. How does replacing natural forests with rubber and oil palm plantations affect soil respiration and methane fluxes? by Aini, F.K., Hergoualc'h, Kristell, Smith, J.U., Verchot, Louis V., Martius, C.

    Published 2020
    “…To evaluate the impact of forest transition to plantations on soil methane (CH4) and respiration (CO2) fluxes, we conducted measurements in an undisturbed forest, a disturbed forest, young and old rubber plantations, and an oil palm plantation on mineral soil in Jambi, Sumatra, Indonesia. Methane fluxes and their controlling variables were monitored monthly over fourteen months; soil respiration was measured less frequently. …”
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    Journal Article
  7. Evaluating policy-relevant research: lessons from a series of theory-based outcomes assessments by Belcher, B., Suryadarma, D., Halimanjaya, A.

    Published 2017
    “…This paper presents a theory-based research evaluation approach that was developed and tested on four policy-relevant research activities: a long-term forest management research programme in the Congo Basin; a large research programme on forests and climate change; a multi-country research project on sustainable wetlands management, and; a research project of the furniture value chain in one district in Indonesia. The first used Contribution Analysis and the others used purpose-built outcome evaluation approaches that combined concepts and methods from several approaches. …”
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    Journal Article
  8. Natural Regeneration After Volcanic Eruptions: Resilience of the Non-legume Nitrogen-Fixing Tree Parasponia rigida by Ishaq, R.M., Hairiah, K., Alfian, I., Noordwijk, M. van

    Published 2020
    “…A resilient indigenous non-legume nitrogen-fixing tree that is adapted to the ash and spreads rapidly protects areas downstream in a volcanic landscape in Indonesia. Within the volcanic ring of fire both the long-term benefits (including densely populated, fertile agricultural soils) and short-term ecological disturbance of volcanic ash deposition are clear. …”
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    Journal Article
  9. Assessing Sumatran Peat Vulnerability to Fire under Various Condition of ENSO Phases Using Machine Learning Approaches by Prasetyo, L.B., Setiawan, Y., Condro, A.A., Kustiyo, K., Putra, E.I., Hayati, N., Wijayanto, A.K., Ramadhi, A., Murdiyarso, D.

    Published 2022
    “…The El-Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) modulates the occurrence of fires in Indonesia through prolonged hydrological drought. Thus, assessing peatland vulnerability to fires and understanding the underlying drivers are essential to developing adaptation and mitigation strategies for peatland. …”
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    Journal Article
  10. How can process-based modeling improve peat CO2 and N2O emission factors for oil palm plantations? by Swails, E., Hergoualc'h, Kristell, Deng, J., Frolking, S., Novita, N.

    Published 2022
    “…To explore the potential of process-based modeling to refine oil palm peat CO2 and N2O EFs, we simulated peat GHG emissions and biogeophysical variables over 30 years in plantations of Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. The DNDC model simulated well the magnitude of C inputs (litterfall and root mortality) and dynamics of annual heterotrophic respiration and peat decomposition N2O fluxes. …”
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    Journal Article
  11. Soil nitrous oxide and methane fluxes from a land-use change transition of primary forest to oil palm in an Indonesian peatland by Swails, E., Drewer, J., Hartill, J., Comeau, L., Verchot, L.V., Hergoualc'h, Kristell

    Published 2023
    “…We measured soil fluxes of N2O and CH4 and their environmental controls along a peatland transition from primary forest (PF) to degraded drained forest (DF) to oil palm plantation (OP) over 18 months in Jambi, Sumatra, Indonesia. Sampling was conducted monthly at all sites and more intensively following two fertilization events in the OP. …”
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    Journal Article

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