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45 results on '"Clifton-Brown, John"'

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1. Yield development and nutrient offtake in contrasting miscanthus hybrids under green and brown harvest regimes.

2. Early impacts of marginal land‐use transition to Miscanthus on soil quality and soil carbon storage across Europe.

3. Valorisation of marginal agricultural land in the bioeconomy.

4. Developing Miscanthus seed plug establishment protocols with mulch film for commercial upscaling.

5. Spring emergence and canopy development strategies in miscanthus hybrids in Mediterranean, continental and maritime European climates.

6. Perennial biomass cropping and use: Shaping the policy ecosystem in European countries.

7. Multispectral image analysis detects differences in drought responses in novel seeded Miscanthus sinensis hybrids.

8. Expanding the Miscanthus market in the UK: Growers in profile and experience, benefits and drawbacks of the bioenergy crop.

9. Site impacts nutrient translocation efficiency in intraspecies and interspecies miscanthus hybrids on marginal lands.

10. Moisture content estimation and senescence phenotyping of novel Miscanthus hybrids combining UAV‐based remote sensing and machine learning.

11. Optimizing seed‐based Miscanthus plug plant production with supplemental heat and light, compost type and volume.

12. Influence of cutting height on biomass yield and quality of miscanthus genotypes.

13. Linkage mapping evidence for a syntenic QTL associated with flowering time in perennial C4 rhizomatous grasses Miscanthus and switchgrass.

14. Commercial experience with miscanthus crops: Establishment, yields and environmental observations.

15. Allelopathic and intraspecific growth competition effects establishment of direct sown Miscanthus.

16. Spatiotemporal assessment of farm‐gate production costs and economic potential of Miscanthus × giganteus, Panicum virgatum L., and Jatropha grown on marginal land in China.

17. Modeled spatial assessment of biomass productivity and technical potential of Miscanthus × giganteus, Panicum virgatum L., and Jatropha on marginal land in China.

18. Projections of global and UK bioenergy potential from Miscanthus × giganteus—Feedstock yield, carbon cycling and electricity generation in the 21st century.

19. Consequential life cycle assessment of miscanthus livestock bedding, diverting straw to bioelectricity generation.

20. Measured and modelled effect of land‐use change from temperate grassland to Miscanthus on soil carbon stocks after 12 years.

21. Stem growth characteristics of high yielding Miscanthus correlate with yield, development and intraspecific competition within plots.

22. Breeding progress and preparedness for mass‐scale deployment of perennial lignocellulosic biomass crops switchgrass, miscanthus, willow and poplar.

23. Harvest date and leaf:stem ratio determine methane hectare yield of miscanthus biomass.

24. Assessing seed priming, sowing date, and mulch film to improve the germination and survival of direct‐sown Miscanthus sinensis in the United Kingdom.

25. Partitioning of ecosystem respiration of CO2 released during land-use transition from temperate agricultural grassland to Miscanthus × giganteus.

26. Could Miscanthus replace maize as the preferred substrate for anaerobic digestion in the United Kingdom? Future breeding strategies.

27. Towards Miscanthus combustion quality improvement: the role of flowering and senescence.

28. Environmental costs and benefits of growing Miscanthus for bioenergy in the UK.

29. Radiation capture and conversion efficiencies of Miscanthus sacchariflorus, M. sinensis and their naturally occurring hybrid M. × giganteus.

30. Progress in upscaling Miscanthus biomass production for the European bio-economy with seed-based hybrids.

31. An interyear comparison of CO2 flux and carbon budget at a commercial-scale land-use transition from semi-improved grassland to Miscanthus x giganteus.

32. Land use change from C3 grassland to C4 Miscanthus: effects on soil carbon content and estimated mitigation benefit after six years.

33. Genome-wide association studies and prediction of 17 traits related to phenology, biomass and cell wall composition in the energy grass Miscanthus sinensis.

34. Contrasting geographic patterns of genetic variation for molecular markers vs. phenotypic traits in the energy grass Miscanthus sinensis.

35. Soil carbon stocks and carbon sequestration rates in seminatural grassland in Aso region, Kumamoto, Southern Japan.

36. Food vs. fuel: the use of land for lignocellulosic 'next generation' energy crops that minimize competition with primary food production.

37. Thermal requirements for seed germination in Miscanthus compared with Switchgrass ( Panicum virgatum), Reed canary grass ( Phalaris arundinaceae) , Maize ( Zea mays) and perennial ryegrass ( Lolium perenne).

38. Characterization of flowering time diversity in Miscanthus species.

39. European-wide GIS-based modelling system for quantifying the feedstock from Miscanthus and the potential contribution to renewable energy targets.

40. Carbon mitigation by the energy crop, Miscanthus.

41. Estimating the greenhouse gas fluxes of European grasslands with a process-based model:.

42. Miscanthus biomass production for energy in Europe and its potential contribution to decreasing fossil fuel carbon emissions.

43. Novel Miscanthus hybrids: Modelling productivity on marginal land in Europe using dynamics of canopy development determined by light interception.

44. Linkage mapping evidence for a syntenic QTL associated with flowering time in perennial C 4 rhizomatous grasses Miscanthus and switchgrass.

45. Predicting future biomass yield in Miscanthus using the carbohydrate metabolic profile as a biomarker.

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