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PhD Research Project - Sustainable Management of Agricultural Soils: Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissi

Employer
Global Academy Jobs
Location
United Kingdom
Closing date
Jan 21, 2019

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Sector
Veterinary Medicine
Hours
Full Time
Organization Type
University and College
Jobseeker Type
Academic (e.g. 'Lecturer')

Job Details

Details

Soil is fundamental to life and is vulnerable to losses in stored carbon (C) and productivity, particularly under intensive agriculture.1 For example, 133 billion tons of soil C has been lost due to agriculture, which alone represents between 10-20% of the total anthropogenic CO2 emission into air.1 Among others, loss in soil C reduces fertility and thus to sustain productivity, application of synthetic fertilizers including nitrogen (N) has intensified. The use of fertilizers has led to increases in production;2 however, at the same time excessive fertilization has been linked to deterioration of environmental quality, and emission of greenhouse gases (GHG) particularly nitrous oxide, which is 300 times more potent in inducing global warming than CO23, 4, 5. Thus there is an urgent need for the identification of soil management practices that can help sustain soil fertility and productivity whilst reducing GHG emissions.6 Arable agriculture in the UK like the global seriously suffers from the soil exhaustion challenge, and there is a current impetus on improving soil health to ensure food security.


One way is to introduce rotations in agriculture such that leys (as soil's resting phase in between cultivation) can be optimized for enhancing fertility whilst sustaining income. A new multi-institutional project in the UK on ‘Restoring Soil Health through Integration of Leys and Sheep Grazing in Arable Rotations' is now establishing farm-scale experimental fields (2019-2022) to evaluate the broader agro-environmental effectiveness of rotations with grass and herb rich leys with and without grazing and tillage, respectively (Fig1). It is hypothesized that herbaceous leys with N fixing plants will enhance soil fertility that will reduce reliance on fertilizers in subsequent cultivations and to this effect the project is focused on measuring soil nutrients and productivity. Since the planned rotations will affect the emission of GHG through its impact on soil N and C transformation processes, which is not included in the consortium project, therefore, the proposed PhD research will evaluate the impacts of traditional (grass-clover) and herbal leys rotations on biological N fixation, N mineralization and greenhouse gas emission rates to identify efficient soil management strategies for incorporation into agricultural practices.


This studentship benefits directly from access to farm-scale experimental network sites currently being established under a multi-intuitional project (> £ 0.9 million) funded by the UKRI-Sustainable Agriculture Research and Innovation Club program. Thus this studentship leverages the very high experimental establishment costs of the project, which would be beyond the funding capacity of any single PhD studentship. The involvement of National Trust, and CEH-Lancaster offers significant in-kind value: access to 15N2O Picarro (>£100k) at CEH and student placement at National Trust (£3000) for the contextualization of the proposed research provides a broad-based training environment in addition to the collaboration potential across the institutions.


For further information and specific questions, contact s.ullah@bham.ac.uk). Relevant PhD studentship and Research information available on the departmental web page: https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/activity/physical-geography/index.aspx

Funding Notes

CENTA studentships are for 3.5 years and are funded by NERC. In addition to the full payment of their tuition fees, successful candidates will receive the following financial support:

Annual stipend, set at £14,777 for 2018/19
Research training support grant (RTSG) of £8,000

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