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Edward G. Gregorich

Researcher at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Publications -  235
Citations -  21245

Edward G. Gregorich is an academic researcher from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Soil organic matter. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 226 publications receiving 19276 citations. Previous affiliations of Edward G. Gregorich include University of Saskatchewan.

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Soil Sampling and Methods of Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a set of methods for soil sampling and analysis, such as: N.H.Hendershot, H.M.Hettiarachchi, C.C.De Freitas Arbuscular Mycorrhiza, Y.K.Soon and W.J.
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Towards a minimum data set to assess soil organic matter quality in agricultural soils

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of soil organic matter is considered to encompass a set of attributes rather than being a single entity and discussed here are total soil organic carbon and nitrogen, light fraction and macroorganic (particulate) matter, mineralizable carbon, microbial biomass, soil carbohydrates and enzymes.
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Measuring and understanding carbon storage in afforested soils by physical fractionation

TL;DR: In this article, aggregate and soil organic matter (SOM) fractionation techniques were used to identify SOC pools that preferentially stabilize SOC in the long term and elucidate SOC sequestration mechanisms in forested soils.
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An approach for estimating net primary productivity and annual carbon inputs to soil for common agricultural crops in Canada

TL;DR: In this paper, the root-derived carbon (C) in these coefficients was estimated by reviewing studies reporting information on plant shoot-to-root (S:R) ratios (n = 168), which were highest for small-grain cereals (7.4), followed by corn (5.6), and lowest for forages (1.6).
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Carbon distribution and losses: erosion and deposition effects

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a framework to assess soil erosion and deposition processes on the distribution and loss of C in soils and evaluate the impact of agriculture on soil C storage.