BeasleyB. W.
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
4 Papers
44 Citations
BeasleyB. W. is an academic researcher from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Manure & Loam. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Denitrification during the growing season as influenced by long-term application of composted versus fresh feedlot manure
TL;DR: Miller et al. as discussed by the authors hypothesized that fall application of composted feedlot manure to cropland may lower growing season denitrification losses of nitrogen (N) to the atmosphere compared with fresh feed-lot manure because of lower carbon (C) availability from labile C (water-soluble C, acetic acid) and total organic C.
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Accumulation and redistribution of residual chloride, nitrate, and soil test phosphorus in soil profiles amended with fresh and composted cattle manure containing straw or wood-chip bedding
TL;DR: Miller et al. as mentioned in this paper discussed the accumulation and redistribution of residual chloride, nitrate, and soil test phosphorus in soil profiles amended with fresh and fresh organic matter, and proposed a method to improve the soil quality.
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Soil properties following long-term application of stockpiled feedlot manure containing straw or wood-chip bedding under barley silage production
TL;DR: Miller et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the influence of long-term land application of stockpiled feedlot manure (SM) containing either wood-chip (SM-WD) or straw bedding on soil properties during the barley silage growing season.
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Influence of long-term manure application on mineral composition of irrigated barley silage
TL;DR: Miller et al. as discussed by the authors measured selected minerals [P, Ca, Ca:P ratio, Mg, K, K:(Ca+Mg) ratio, Na, Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu] of irrigated barley silage (Hordeum vulgare L.) on a clay loam soil after 4, 7, 2005 and 11 (2009) years of annual applications of composted (CM) or stockpiled (SM) feedlot manure with wood-chips (WD) or straw (ST) bedding at three application rates (13, 39
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