HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Carla Ragonezi et al. from the ISOPlexis Centre Sustainable Agriculture and Food Technology, Campus da Penteada, University of Madeira have published the research: Sewage Sludge Fertilizationu2014A Case Study of Sweet Potato Yield and Heavy Metal Accumulation, in the Journal: Agronomy 2022, 12, 1902. of 13/08/2022
- what: The experiment was randomly designed with three 25 m2 plots for each treatment (2 SS concentrations + control without SS) and performed in two consecutive cycles. The authors aimed to evaluate the use of SS as a source of organic matter for the re-generation of eroded . . .
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