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Title: AmeriFlux US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till

Abstract

This is the AmeriFlux version of the carbon flux data for the site US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till. Site Description - RC2 operated from 2013-2016 at the R.J. Cook Agronomy Farm, as part of a cluster of 5 towers (RC1 to RC5) operated for the Regional Approaches to Climate Change (REACCH) USDA-supported research project. The tower predates the Longterm Agroecosystem Research (LTAR) site common experiment, which was established in nearby fields at the Cook Agronomy Farm in 2017. Cook Agronomy Farm is in the high-precipitation agroecological zone of the Columbia Plateau’s dryland cropping region. Wheat-based crop rotations are grown annually. RC2 had conventional tillage management (reduced-till) since at least 1998. It was contrasted with RC1, which had no-till management over the same time period. RC2 captured the same tillage practices as the US-CF2 site established in 2017 as part of LTAR common experiment. However, the towers have distinct footprints, aspects, and soil series composition.

Authors:
; ;
  1. The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Guangzhou)
  2. Washington State University
Publication Date:
DOE Contract Number:  
AC02-05CH11231
Research Org.:
Washington State University
Sponsoring Org.:
USDOE; USDA
OSTI Identifier:
1498747
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1498747

Citation Formats

Chi, Jinshu, Lamb, Brian, and Pressley, Shelley. AmeriFlux US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till. United States: N. p., 2019. Web. doi:10.17190/AMF/1498747.
Chi, Jinshu, Lamb, Brian, & Pressley, Shelley. AmeriFlux US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till. United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1498747
Chi, Jinshu, Lamb, Brian, and Pressley, Shelley. 2019. "AmeriFlux US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till". United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1498747. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1498747. Pub date:Mon Mar 11 04:00:00 UTC 2019
@article{osti_1498747,
title = {AmeriFlux US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till},
author = {Chi, Jinshu and Lamb, Brian and Pressley, Shelley},
abstractNote = {This is the AmeriFlux version of the carbon flux data for the site US-RC2 Cook Agronomy Farm - Conventional Till. Site Description - RC2 operated from 2013-2016 at the R.J. Cook Agronomy Farm, as part of a cluster of 5 towers (RC1 to RC5) operated for the Regional Approaches to Climate Change (REACCH) USDA-supported research project. The tower predates the Longterm Agroecosystem Research (LTAR) site common experiment, which was established in nearby fields at the Cook Agronomy Farm in 2017. Cook Agronomy Farm is in the high-precipitation agroecological zone of the Columbia Plateau’s dryland cropping region. Wheat-based crop rotations are grown annually. RC2 had conventional tillage management (reduced-till) since at least 1998. It was contrasted with RC1, which had no-till management over the same time period. RC2 captured the same tillage practices as the US-CF2 site established in 2017 as part of LTAR common experiment. However, the towers have distinct footprints, aspects, and soil series composition.},
doi = {10.17190/AMF/1498747},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Mon Mar 11 04:00:00 UTC 2019},
month = {Mon Mar 11 04:00:00 UTC 2019}
}