![]() |
I Forgot my Password |
||||||||||||||||||||
Home |About this site | How to use this site| Contact us | RSS Feed
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Crop Production >> Fertilizers
Synthetic fertilizers – produced using fossil fuel – have helped increase crop yields enormously, and are credited with making possible the global population boom during the 20th century. But, farm runoff of excess nitrates and phosphates from fertilizers has caused dead zones in bodies of water all over the world.
Recommended resources on this topic: Reports & Other Documents
Current World Fertilizer Trends and Outlook to 2011/12 Food and Agriculture Organization, February 2008.
Anthropogenically enhanced fluxes of water and carbon from the Mississippi River P. Raymond, et al. Nature; Jan. 24, 2008.
Dead in the water Environmental Working Group; April 10, 2006.
... more
Peer-reviewed Journal Articles
The story of phosphorus: Global food security and food for thought D. Cordell, et al. Global Environ Change, 2009.
A century of changing land-use and water-quality relationships in the continental US W. Broussard and R. E. Turner, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2009.
Competition for Light Causes Plant Biodiversity Loss Following Eutrophication Y. Hautier et al., Science, May 2009.
... more
Relevant Organizations
The Fertilizer Institute (trade association) IFDC International center for soil fertility and agricultural development.
International Fertilizer Industry Association ... more
Additional Tools & Resources
Economic Research Service (USDA) U.S. Fertilizer Use and Price (data sets)
Feeding the World, Poisoning the Planet Baltimore Sun; five-part series on nitrogen, September 2000.
National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service Soils & Compost.
... more
|
|
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
A project of the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future © 2008, Johns Hopkins University. All rights reserved. Web Policies |
||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||