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  Reducing Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Emissions ‘RAGGE’


   Research Projects

This project is no longer listed on FindAPhD.com and may not be available.

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  Mrs Donna Fellowes, Dr T Mauchline  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

Nitrogen inputs into agricultural systems are an essential requirement for healthy, high yielding crop production, but they can also result in the release of excess N either by leaching or by emission of the highly reactive greenhouse gas (GHG) N2O. In the UK, direct N2O emissions from soil accounted for about 50.5% of all N2O released in 2016. This is not only damaging to the environment, it is also a financial loss to the farmer and a lost nutrient resource to the growing crops. With the use of state of the art real-time GHG detection systems (monitoring N2O, NH3, CH4, CO2 and O2 emissions) and advanced molecular and sequencing methods for detecting, expression profiling and sequencing genes involved in N-cycling and GHG emission, this project aims to understand which environmental drivers are involved in GHG emissions and identify mitigation strategies for their reduction.

For further details please contact Dr Tim Mauchline [Email Address Removed] or Ian Clark [Email Address Removed].

Funding Notes

The studentship is only available to UK and other EU nationals (due to funding criteria, EU nationals who have not been resident in the UK for the three years prior to the start of their studentship will be restricted to a fees-only award). If you have not always lived in the UK refer to the NERC Studentships Handbook, section B for more information. Each student will be supported by the tax-free stipend (£14,777 in 2018/19), typically for 3.5 years. In addition, for eligible students, the award will cover EU/UK fees.