Trends in soil chemistry and floristics associated with the establishment of a low-input meadow system on an arable clay soil in Essex, England
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in Biological Conservation
- Vol. 52 (2) , 135-146
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0006-3207(90)90122-6
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Succession in Old‐Field Plant Communities: Effects of Contrasting Types of Nutrient EnrichmentEcology, 1988
- Commonness and rarity in plants with special reference to the Sheffield flora part II: The relative importance of climate, soils and land useBiological Conservation, 1986
- THE MAINTENANCE OF SPECIES‐RICHNESS IN PLANT COMMUNITIES: THE IMPORTANCE OF THE REGENERATION NICHEBiological Reviews, 1977
- Changes in Total N, Organic Matter, Available P, and Bulk Densities of a Cultivated Soil 8 Years after Tame Pastures were Established1Agronomy Journal, 1976
- Plant Species Diversity in Old‐Field Successional Ecosystems in Southern IllinoisEcology, 1975
- Some properties of a chrono-toposequence of soils from granite in new Zealand, 2. forms and amounts of phosphorusGeoderma, 1975
- Botanical aspects of conservation management of chalk grasslandsBiological Conservation, 1969
- Succession on Abandoned Fields in the Shawnee Hills, Southern IllinoisEcology, 1968
- Accumulation of organic matter in some New Zealand soils under permanent pastureNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1964
- Residual effect of phosphate top-dressing on a yellow-brown loam from andesitic ashNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1963