J. Nowak

ORCID: 0009-0001-1269-8763
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About
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Research Areas
  • Aluminum toxicity and tolerance in plants and animals
  • Flowering Plant Growth and Cultivation
  • Forest ecology and management
  • Plant Physiology and Cultivation Studies
  • Silicon Effects in Agriculture
  • Clay minerals and soil interactions
  • Polymer-Based Agricultural Enhancements
  • Composting and Vermicomposting Techniques
  • Banana Cultivation and Research
  • Plant and soil sciences
  • Biofuel production and bioconversion
  • Plant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics
  • Plant Ecology and Soil Science
  • Plant responses to elevated CO2
  • Anaerobic Digestion and Biogas Production
  • Innovations in Aquaponics and Hydroponics Systems
  • Potato Plant Research
  • Agricultural Engineering and Mechanization
  • Plant Disease Management Techniques
  • Horticultural and Viticultural Research
  • Agriculture, Plant Science, Crop Management
  • Microbial metabolism and enzyme function
  • Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance
  • Tree-ring climate responses
  • Hibiscus Plant Research Studies

Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences
2025

University of Florida
2005-2006

Southwest Florida Research
2005

Mississippi State University
1995-1999

Virginia Tech
1997

The research aimed to study the effects of straw-derived biochar and two types chemically modified on biomethane production from glucose as a model substrate sugar beet pulp real substrate. chemical modification with H3PO4 acid KOH base resulted in change surface area properties its functional group’s abundance decrease mass yield production. anaerobic digestion process was performed batch reactors kept at 37 °C for 20 days. substrate-to-inoculum ratio by volatile solids 0.5, while added...

10.3390/ma18071608 article EN Materials 2025-04-02

Abstract Although yield responses to thinning in loblolly pine have been well documented, short- and long-term morphological physiological changes are largely unknown. To investigate these responses, three 8-yr-old, 0.2024 ha replicate stands of were thinned by 50% May 1988, bole growth the crown measured annually for next 6 yr. In situ gas exchange measurements monitored upper lower third crowns monthly during through sixth growing seasons following thinning. First- second-year reported...

10.1093/forestscience/43.4.529 article EN Forest Science 1997-11-01

Aluminum (Al) distribution among several cellular fractions was investigated in root tips of seedlings one Al-resistant and Al-sensitive family slash pine (Pinus elliottii Engelm.) loblolly taeda L.) grown nutrient solution containing 100 μM AlCl3 (pH 4) for 167 h. present 5-mm-long fractionated into cell-wall-labile (desorbed 0.5 mM citric acid), cell-wall-bound (retained after filtering disrupted cells through 20-μm mesh) symplasmic (filtrate following cell disruption) fractions. When...

10.1093/treephys/25.2.245 article EN Tree Physiology 2005-02-01

In response to concerns about aluminum and HCl exposure associated with rocket motor testing launches, survival growth of full-sib families loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) slash elliottii Engelm.) were evaluated in a nursery bed experiment. Each species was exposed single soil application chloride (0.33 M AlCl3, pH 2.5), hydrochloric acid (0.39 HCl, 0.6) or water, without mycorrhizal inoculation Pisolithus tinctorius (Coker Couch). After 20 weeks inoculation, AlCl3 treatments averaged 52% for...

10.1093/treephys/26.9.1207 article EN Tree Physiology 2006-09-01

ISHS International Symposium on Growing Media and Hydroponics THE EFFECTS OF POTTING MEDIA AND CONCENTRATION NUTRIENT SOLUTION ON GROWTH CONTENT THREE FICUS SPECIES CULTIVATED EBB-AND-FLOW BENCHES

10.17660/actahortic.1999.481.51 article EN Acta Horticulturae 1999-01-01

(1999). Genetic Linkage Mapping of Genomic Regions Conferring Tolerance to High Aluminum in Slash Pine. Journal Sustainable Forestry: Vol. 10, No. 1-2, pp. 69-78.

10.1300/j091v10n01_08 article EN Journal of Sustainable Forestry 1999-01-01

To probe variation in Al sensitivity of two co-occurring pine species, seedlings from six full-sib families loblolly (Pinus taeda L.) and slash elliottii Engelm.) were grown solution culture containing 4.4 mM (high-Al) or 0.01 (low-Al) AlCl(3) at pH 4 for 58 days. On average, both species had 41% less total dry weight the high-Al treatment than low-Al treatment. Stem volume growth was more sensitive to that pine. In inhibited root shoot weight. Within-species among greater (24 52% inhibition...

10.1093/treephys/15.9.605 article EN Tree Physiology 1995-09-01

10.17660/actahortic.1985.167.12 article EN Acta Horticulturae 1985-04-01
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