Timothy J. Clough
Lincoln University (New Zealand)
217 Papers
721 Citations
Timothy J. Clough is an academic researcher from Lincoln University (New Zealand). The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Denitrification. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 202 publications. Previous affiliations of Timothy J. Clough include Canterbury of New Zealand & Elsevier.
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Papers
A Review of Biochar and Soil Nitrogen Dynamics
TL;DR: A review of biochar-N research can be found in this paper, where the authors established emerging trends and gaps in biochar N research, as well as the long-term practical effectiveness of inorganic-N adsorption as a NO3 − leaching mitigation option, requires further study.
Biochar induced soil microbial community change: Implications for biogeochemical cycling of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus
Craig Anderson,Leo M. Condron,Timothy J. Clough,Mark Fiers,Alison Stewart,Robert A. Hill,Robert R. Sherlock +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, a controlled pot experiment was designed to investigate temporal changes in soil microbial ecology and physicochemical parameters in the presence and absence of biochar in both the rhizosphere and bulk soil using TRFLP coupled with a 454 new generation sequencing database.
767
Biochar and the Nitrogen Cycle: Introduction
Timothy J. Clough,Leo M. Condron +1 more
TL;DR: This special collection of papers on biochar and the nitrogen cycle shows for the first time how microbial nitrification communities and function differ with exposure to biochar, and how composting of organic materials with biochar can reduce N losses and enhance the nutrient status of the composted product.
479
Biochar adsorbed ammonia is bioavailable
TL;DR: In this paper, an isotope of nitrogen is used to show that ammonia-N adsorbed by biochar is stable in ambient air, but readily bioavailable when placed in the soil.
466
Dissolved organic nitrogen : an overlooked pathway of nitrogen loss from agricultural systems?
TL;DR: It is concluded that DON leaching can be an important N loss pathway from agriculture systems and models used to simulate and predict N losses from agricultural systems should include DON losses.
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