Notice: Undefined index: target_type in open_data_schema_map_endpoint_process_map_recursion() (line 1070 of /var/www/html/dkan/profiles/dkan/modules/contrib/open_data_schema_map/open_data_schema_map.module).
Revisions allow you to track differences between multiple versions of your content, and revert back to older versions.
The REACCH project was initiated in 2011 to ensure sustainable cereal production in the inland Pacific Northwest. The project was led by an interdisciplinary team of scientists and other professionals from three land grant institutions and the USDA Agricultural Research Service, with funding from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture’s Climate Variability and Change Program.
All historical data are based on average of 31 years in historical (baseline)
period from 1979 to 2010. All the data under future folder are based on
average of 31 years in future period from 2055 to 2085 which is presented as
2070s. Also we used...
All historical data are based on average of 31 years in historical (baseline)
period from 1979 to 2010. All the data under future folder are based on
average of 31 years in future period from 2055 to 2085 which is presented as
2070s. Also we used...
All historical data are based on average of 31 years in historical (baseline)
period from 1979 to 2010. All the data under future folder are based on
average of 31 years in future period from 2055 to 2085 which is presented as
2070s. Also we used...
Data: REACCHPNA Biotics - Cereal Cyst Nematode 2011 Soil sample collection.
Two field surveys for P. neglectus, P. thornei and H. avenae were conducted
by collecting soil samples from Washington State University Extension Cereal
Variety Trials...
This collection contains the metadata records produced by the REACCH-PNA
project during its lifetime. The records describe a variety of types of
resources. Some resources may no longer be available or may not be available
from the listed location...
As funding agencies embrace open science principles that encourage sharing
data and computer code developed to produce research outputs, we must respond
with new modes of publication. Furthermore, as we address the expanding
reproducibility...
Our team has installed five eddy covariance (EC) flux towers to continuously
monitor fluxes of CO2, H2O, and energy. at 5 sites in different
agroecological zones across the region. The towers were deployed beginning in
summer, 2011. The towers...