Grazing management in rangeland grassland systems in South and East Australia.

1. Related practices. 2. Description of the case study. 3. Context of the case study. 4. Possibility of scaling up. 5. Impact on soil organic carbon stocks. 6. Other benefits of the practice. 7. Potential drawbacks to the practice. 8. Potential barriers for adoption.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: KHALIL, M. I., CORDOVIL, C. M. D. S., FRANCAVIGLIA, R., HENRY, B., KLUMPP, K., KONCZ, P., LLORENTE, M., MADARI, B. E., MUÑOZ-ROJAS, M., RAINER, N.
Other Authors: MOHAMMAD I. KHALIL, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN, IRELAND; CLÁUDIA M. D. S. CORDOVIL, UNIVERSITY OF LISBON, PORTUGAL; ROSA FRANCAVIGLIA, COUNCIL FOR AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND ECONOMICS, RESEARCH CENTRE FOR AGRICULTURE AND ENVIRONMENT, ROME, ITALY; BEVERLEY HENRY, QUEENSLAND UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA; KATJA KLUMPP, INRA, CLERMONT-FERRAND, FRANCE; PETER KONCZ, DUNA-IPOLY NATIONAL PARK DIRECTORATE, BUDAPEST, HUNGARY; MIREIA LLORENTE, UNIVERSITY OF EXTREMADURA, PLASENCIA CAMPUS, SPAIN; BEATA EMOKE MADARI, CNPAF; MIRIAM MUÑOZ-ROJAS, THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA; NERGER RAINER, SOIL & MORE IMPACTS GMBH, HAMBURG, GERMANY.
Format: Parte de livro biblioteca
Language:Ingles
English
Published: 2021
Subjects:Grazing management, Rangeland soils, Australia,
Online Access:http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/1136311
https://doi.org/10.4060/cb6598en
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!