Research ArticleResearch Section
A framework to estimate climate mitigation potential for US cropland using publicly available data
J.M. Moore, D.K. Manter, M. Bowman, M. Hunter, E. Bruner and S.C. McClelland
Journal of Soil and Water Conservation December 2022, 00132; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2489/jswc.2023.00132
J.M. Moore
is a research soil scientist at the USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS), Forage Seed and Cereal Research Unit, Corvallis, Oregon.
D.K. Manter
is a research soil scientist at the USDA ARS, Soil Management and Sugar Beet Research, Fort Collins, Colorado.
M. Bowman
is a research agricultural economist (conservation liaison) at the USDA Economic Research Service, Washington, DC.
M. Hunter
is the associate director of the Forever Green Initiative at the University of Minnesota and a senior research fellow with American Farmland Trust, Washington, DC.
E. Bruner
is the chief of staff at the Soil Health Institute, Morrisville, North Carolina, and was previously the Midwest science director with American Farmland Trust, Washington, DC.
S.C. McClelland
formerly was the climate change and soil health scientist with American Farmland Trust, Washington, DC. She currently is a postdoctoral associate with the Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University, Cornell, New York.
Data supplements
2023.00132 Supplementary File
Files in this Data Supplement:
In this issue
Journal of Soil and Water Conservation
Vol. 79, Issue 4
July/August 2024
A framework to estimate climate mitigation potential for US cropland using publicly available data
J.M. Moore, D.K. Manter, M. Bowman, M. Hunter, E. Bruner, S.C. McClelland
Journal of Soil and Water Conservation Dec 2022, 00132; DOI: 10.2489/jswc.2023.00132