Nathan R. Lee
Ohio State University
6 Papers
6 Citations
Nathan R. Lee is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nutrient & Soil water. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Changes in rhizosphere bacterial gene expression following glyphosate treatment.
Molli M. Newman,Nicola Lorenz,Nigel Hoilett,Nathan R. Lee,Richard P. Dick,Mark R. Liles,Cliff Ramsier,Joseph W. Kloepper +7 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that long-term glyphosate use can affect rhizosphere bacterial activities and potentially shift bacterial community composition favoring more glyphosate-tolerant bacteria.
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From the Ground Up: Prairies on Reclaimed Mine Land—Impacts on Soil and Vegetation
TL;DR: This paper investigated the impact of prairie restoration on mine lands, focusing on the plant community and soil properties and found that restoration with prairie plant communities slowly shifted soil properties, but mining disturbance was still the most significant driver in controlling soil properties.
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Soil Enzyme Activities Associated with Differential Outcomes of Contrasting Approaches to Soil Fertility Management in Corn and Soybean Fields
Nicola Lorenz,Brian B. McSpadden Gardener,Nathan R. Lee,Cliff Ramsier,Richard P. Dick +4 more
- 30 Oct 2020
TL;DR: Investigation of the effects of two contrasting approaches to crop fertility management on crop productivity, soil test measurements, and soil enzyme activity as integrative measures of soil health indicates improvements in soil health detected by soil GLU and ARYL enzyme activities are associated with significant improvements in soils quality and crop productivity.
Interactions and responses of n-damo archaea, n-damo bacteria and anammox bacteria to various electron acceptors in natural and constructed wetland sediments
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the structure and abundance of these organisms and their response to substrate inputs (sulfate, nitrate, or nitrite) in two wetlands of contrasting properties.
Composition and carbon utilization of soil microbial communities subjected to long-term nitrogen fertilization in a temperate grassland in northern China
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of long-term N fertilization on grassland microbial communities, and explore if the alteration of labile C utilization of microbial communities was affected by N. A 35-day multi-factorial incubation experiment with three n fertilization rates 0, 4, or 16g Nm−m−2 yr−1 (applied as urea) and one C substrate application, 0.4 µg 13C glucose g−1 soil was conducted using a temperate grassland soil.