| Literature DB >> 29159449 |
Peter Leinweber1, Ulrich Bathmann2, Uwe Buczko3, Caroline Douhaire4, Bettina Eichler-Löbermann5, Emmanuel Frossard6, Felix Ekardt4, Helen Jarvie7, Inga Krämer8, Christian Kabbe9, Bernd Lennartz10, Per-Erik Mellander11, Günther Nausch12, Hisao Ohtake13, Jens Tränckner14.
Abstract
This special issue of Ambio compiles a series of contributions made at the 8th International Phosphorus Workshop (IPW8), held in September 2016 in Rostock, Germany. The introducing overview article summarizes major published scientific findings in the time period from IPW7 (2015) until recently, including presentations from IPW8. The P issue was subdivided into four themes along the logical sequence of P utilization in production, environmental, and societal systems: (1) Sufficiency and efficiency of P utilization, especially in animal husbandry and crop production; (2) P recycling: technologies and product applications; (3) P fluxes and cycling in the environment; and (4) P governance. The latter two themes had separate sessions for the first time in the International Phosphorus Workshops series; thus, this overview presents a scene-setting rather than an overview of the latest research for these themes. In summary, this paper details new findings in agricultural and environmental P research, which indicate reduced P inputs, improved management options, and provide translations into governance options for a more sustainable P use.Entities:
Keywords: Cropping system; Eutrophication; Fertilizer; Governance; P efficiency; Plant nutrition
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29159449 PMCID: PMC5722737 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-017-0968-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Schematic presentation of P fluxes through various process and ecosystems along which originally mined and processed P is diluted and distributed over increasingly large parts of the terrestrial and aquatic environments
Fig. 2Overview on P-recovery technologies in Europe (Kabbe et al. 2015; Ohtake and Okano 2015; Kabbe and Kraus 2017)
Fig. 3Three principal routes for nutrient recycling from sewage to agriculture (Kabbe 2013)