No-till agriculture has the ability to reduce fuel consumption, increase soil moisture, reduce soil erosion and increase organic matter. However, it remains unclear whether it increases herbicide use overall in the long term for communities that use no-till as their primary source of conservation agriculture. The preponderance of literature suggests that no-till has increased herbicide use, but it is difficult to quantify how much herbicide has increased in a given location and to directly correlate changes in herbicide use to changes in soil and water quality. This paper provides several methods to determine how herbicide use has changed over time in an agricultural community in Oregon that switched over to no-till in the late 1990s and ea...
Adoption of conservation tillage can lead to substantial environmental benefits from reduced soil er...
The introduction of organic-based herbicides in the late 1940\u27s revolutionized weed management wi...
Herbicide runoff from cropping fields has been identified as a threat to the Great Barrier Reef ecos...
Riparian ecosystems provide various ecosystem services including habitat for a variety of plant and ...
Increasing sophistication in application techniques, herbicide chemistry, and related technology in ...
The use of agricultural chemicals often results in water pollution. This research, comprising three ...
Herbicides are used in agricultural and wildland ecosystems to reduce the density of weeds and promo...
Agricultural chemicals are essential components of agricultural production systems in the United sta...
The quantity of herbicides applied in crops has disturbed environmentalists for many years and sever...
Increasing public pressure against the use of pesticides and other agricultural inputs has placed in...
A variety of conservation trends have gained and lost favor throughout the years in agriculture, wit...
World-wide, sediment is the major water quality problem. The use of herbicides for controlling compe...
Previous studies by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) have established that many different herbicide...
Sediment, nutrients, and pesticides are universally accepted as the greatest threats to surface wate...
The Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine System (APES) is the second largest estuarine system within the main...
Adoption of conservation tillage can lead to substantial environmental benefits from reduced soil er...
The introduction of organic-based herbicides in the late 1940\u27s revolutionized weed management wi...
Herbicide runoff from cropping fields has been identified as a threat to the Great Barrier Reef ecos...
Riparian ecosystems provide various ecosystem services including habitat for a variety of plant and ...
Increasing sophistication in application techniques, herbicide chemistry, and related technology in ...
The use of agricultural chemicals often results in water pollution. This research, comprising three ...
Herbicides are used in agricultural and wildland ecosystems to reduce the density of weeds and promo...
Agricultural chemicals are essential components of agricultural production systems in the United sta...
The quantity of herbicides applied in crops has disturbed environmentalists for many years and sever...
Increasing public pressure against the use of pesticides and other agricultural inputs has placed in...
A variety of conservation trends have gained and lost favor throughout the years in agriculture, wit...
World-wide, sediment is the major water quality problem. The use of herbicides for controlling compe...
Previous studies by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) have established that many different herbicide...
Sediment, nutrients, and pesticides are universally accepted as the greatest threats to surface wate...
The Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine System (APES) is the second largest estuarine system within the main...
Adoption of conservation tillage can lead to substantial environmental benefits from reduced soil er...
The introduction of organic-based herbicides in the late 1940\u27s revolutionized weed management wi...
Herbicide runoff from cropping fields has been identified as a threat to the Great Barrier Reef ecos...