Human dependence on nitrogen fertilizers and its consequences

Authors

  • Fernando De la Torre Spain
  • Rafael A Cañas Spain

Keywords:

fertilizers

Abstract

In the current demographic context, with a excessive population growth worldwide and a continuous increase in the level oflife in especially populated countries, cover the nutritional needs and demands of humanity has become an extraordinary challenge.

 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Publication Facts

Metric
This article
Other articles
Peer reviewers 
0
2.4

Reviewer profiles  N/A

Author statements

Author statements
This article
Other articles
Data availability 
N/A
16%
External funding 
N/A
32%
Competing interests 
N/A
11%
Metric
This journal
Other journals
Articles accepted 
3%
33%
Days to publication 
3272
145

Indexed in

Editor & editorial board
profiles
Academic society 
N/A
Publisher 
Uma Editorial. Universidad de Málaga

References

Pingali PL. Green revolution: impacts, limits, and the path ahead. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 109:12302-12308, 2012.

Ridley M. The new NUE thing. Nitrogen-use eciency, the next green revolution. The Economist. The World in 2010. http://www.economist.com/node/14742733, 2009.

Xu G, Fan X, Miller AJ. Plant nitrogen assimilation and use eciency. Annu Rev Plant Biol. 63:153-182, 2012.

Good AG, Beatty PH. Fertilizing nature: a tragedy of excess in the commons. PLoS Biol. 9:e1001124, 2011.

Shrawat AK, Carroll RT, DePauw M, Taylor GJ, Good AG. Genetic engineering of improved nitrogen use eficiency in rice by the tissue-speficic expression of alanine aminotransferase. Plant Biotech J 6:722-732, 2008

Published

2014-12-20

How to Cite

De la Torre, F., & Cañas, R. A. (2014). Human dependence on nitrogen fertilizers and its consequences. Encuentros En La Biología, 7(152), 203–206. Retrieved from https://www.revistas.uma.es/index.php/enbio/article/view/18062