Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Standard Standard

Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems. / Brown, Roy.
Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy. ed. / Nigel Boatman. Vol. 54 Leister: Association of Applied Biologists, 1999. p. 207 to 210.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Brown, R 1999, Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems. in N Boatman (ed.), Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy. vol. 54, Association of Applied Biologists, Leister, pp. 207 to 210, Field margins and buffer zones : ecology, management and policy, Leicester, United Kingdom, 20/09/99.

APA

Brown, R. (1999). Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems. In N. Boatman (Ed.), Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy (Vol. 54, pp. 207 to 210). Association of Applied Biologists.

CBE

Brown R. 1999. Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems. Boatman N, editor. In Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy. Leister: Association of Applied Biologists. pp. 207 to 210.

MLA

Brown, Roy "Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems". Boatman, Nigel (ed.). Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy. Leister: Association of Applied Biologists. 1999, 207 to 210.

VancouverVancouver

Brown R. Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems. In Boatman N, editor, Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy. Vol. 54. Leister: Association of Applied Biologists. 1999. p. 207 to 210

Author

Brown, Roy. / Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems. Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy. editor / Nigel Boatman. Vol. 54 Leister : Association of Applied Biologists, 1999. pp. 207 to 210

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Grass margins and earthworm activity in organic and integrated systems

AU - Brown, Roy

PY - 1999/9/30

Y1 - 1999/9/30

N2 - A multi site 10 year study of the role of grass margins in sustaining earthworm populations in arable farming regimes. Grass margins are vital as buffering and breeding reservoirs for all three earthworm activity groups. They influence cropped area populations and influence re-colonisation post major cultivation. This influence is particularly important where depleting crops, such as potatoes, are involved.

AB - A multi site 10 year study of the role of grass margins in sustaining earthworm populations in arable farming regimes. Grass margins are vital as buffering and breeding reservoirs for all three earthworm activity groups. They influence cropped area populations and influence re-colonisation post major cultivation. This influence is particularly important where depleting crops, such as potatoes, are involved.

M3 - Conference contribution

SN - 0265-1491

VL - 54

SP - 207 to 210

BT - Field Margins and Buffer Zones : Ecology, Management and Policy

A2 - Boatman, Nigel

PB - Association of Applied Biologists

CY - Leister

T2 - Field margins and buffer zones : ecology, management and policy

Y2 - 20 September 1999 through 22 September 1999

ER -