48 results on '"Conesa, Héctor M."'
Search Results
2. Evaluation of the trade-off between water use efficiency and nutrient use efficiency in two semiarid coniferous tree species growing on an organic amended metalliferous mine tailing substrate
3. Effects on metal availability of the application of tree biochar and municipal waste biosolid in a metalliferous mine tailings substrate
4. A critical assessment on the short-term response of microbial relative composition in a mine tailings soil amended with biochar and manure compost
5. Biochar and urban solid refuse ameliorate the inhospitality of acidic mine tailings and foster effective spontaneous plant colonization under semiarid climate
6. Effects of a soil organic amendment on metal allocation of trees for the phytomanagement of mining-impacted soils
7. The importance of edaphic niches functionality for the sustainability of phytomanagement in semiarid mining impacted ecosystems
8. Biochar from sewage sludge and pruning trees reduced porewater Cd, Pb and Zn concentrations in acidic, but not basic, mine soils under hydric conditions
9. Metal mobility assessment for the application of an urban organic waste amendment in two degraded semiarid soils
10. The potential use of Piptatherum miliaceum for the phytomanagement of mine tailings in semiarid areas: Role of soil fertility and plant competition
11. Suitability of a municipal solid waste as organic amendment for agricultural and metal(loid)-contaminated soils: effects on soil properties, plant growth and metal(loid) allocation in Zea mays L.
12. Evaluation of the rhizospheric microbiome of the native colonizer Piptatherum miliaceum in semiarid mine tailings
13. Usefulness of pioneer vegetation for the phytomanagement of metal(loid)s enriched tailings: Grasses vs. shrubs vs. trees
14. Elemental and stable isotope composition of Pinus halepensis foliage along a metal(loid) polluted gradient: implications for phytomanagement of mine tailings in semiarid areas
15. Neutron radiography as a tool for revealing root development in soil: capabilities and limitations
16. Rhizosphere and flooding regime as key factors for the mobilisation of arsenic and potentially harmful metals in basic, mining-polluted salt marsh soils
17. Effects on metal availability of the application of tree biochar and municipal waste biosolid in a metalliferous mine tailings substrate
18. Metal Uptake by Spontaneous Vegetation in Acidic Mine Tailings from a Semiarid Area in South Spain: Implications for Revegetation and Land Management
19. Metal extractability in acidic and neutral mine tailings from the Cartagena-La Unión Mining District (SE Spain)
20. Mining landscape: A cultural tourist opportunity or an environmental problem?: The study case of the Cartagena–La Unión Mining District (SE Spain)
21. In Situ Heavy Metal Accumulation in Lettuce Growing Near a Former Mining Waste Disposal Area: Implications for Agricultural Management
22. Effects of Increasing Dosages of Acid Mining Wastes in Metal Uptake by Lygeum spartum and Soil Metal Extractability
23. A Laboratory Study on Revegetation and Metal Uptake in Native Plant Species from Neutral Mine Tailings
24. The Mar Menor lagoon (SE Spain): A singular natural ecosystem threatened by human activities
25. Edaphic factors determining the colonization of semiarid mine tailings by a ruderal shrub and two tree plant species: Implications for phytomanagement
26. Selection of Autochthonous Plant Species from SE Spain for Soil Lead Phytoremediation Purposes
27. Effects of a soil organic amendment on metal allocation of trees for the phytomanagement of mining-impacted soils
28. In Situ Heavy Metal Accumulation in Lettuce Growing Near a Former Mining Waste Disposal Area: Implications for Agricultural Management
29. Nutrient limitation determines the suitability of a municipal organic waste for phytomanaging metal(loid) enriched mine tailings with a pine-grass co-culture
30. Importance of intra- and interspecific plant interactions for the phytomanagement of semiarid mine tailings using the tree species Pinus halepensis
31. Seasonal changes in antioxidative/oxidative profile of mining and non-mining populations of Syrian beancaper as determined by soil conditions
32. A Critical View of Current State of Phytotechnologies to Remediate Soils: Still a Promising Tool?
33. Antimony retention and release from drained and waterlogged shooting range soil under field conditions
34. Assessment of the employment of halophyte plant species for the phytomanagement of mine tailings in semiarid areas
35. Assessment of metal(loid)s availability and their uptake by Pinus halepensis in a Mediterranean forest impacted by abandoned tailings
36. Erratum to “Rhizosphere and flooding regime as key factors for the mobilisation of arsenic and potentially harmful metals in basic, mining-polluted salt marsh soils” [Appl. Geochem. 25 (2010) 1722–1733]
37. Metal Uptake by Spontaneous Vegetation in Acidic Mine Tailings from a Semiarid Area in South Spain: Implications for Revegetation and Land Management
38. The Cartagena–La Unión mining district (SE spain): a review of environmental problems and emerging phytoremediation solutions after fifteen years research
39. In Situ Heavy Metal Accumulation in Lettuce Growing Near a Former Mining Waste Disposal Area: Implications for Agricultural Management
40. Root responses to soil Ni heterogeneity in a hyperaccumulator and a non-accumulator species
41. The Phytomanagement of Trace Elements in Soil
42. Response of native grasses and Cicer arietinum to soil polluted with mining wastes: Implications for the management of land adjacent to mine sites
43. Neutron radiography as a tool for revealing root development in soil: capabilities and limitations
44. Dynamics of metal tolerant plant communities’ development in mine tailings from the Cartagena-La Unión Mining District (SE Spain) and their interest for further revegetation purposes
45. Growth of Lygeum spartum in acid mine tailings: response of plants developed from seedlings, rhizomes and at field conditions
46. Initial studies for the phytostabilization of a mine tailing from the Cartagena-La Union Mining District (SE Spain)
47. Heavy metal accumulation and tolerance in plants from mine tailings of the semiarid Cartagena–La Unión mining district (SE Spain)
48. Phytoremediation
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.