Overview
Potential agronomic benefits refers to the measurable improvements in crop production, resource-use efficiency, and farm sustainability that arise from agronomic practices and inputs. Within crop and soil science, these benefits are quantified through endpoints such as grain and biomass yield, nitrogen-use and water-use efficiency, soil fertility and organic-matter status, and resilience to abiotic and biotic stress. Agronomic gains derive from the management of fertilisation regimes, crop residue retention, soil testing and nutrient recommendation, the use of biofertilisers and organic amendments, cultivar selection, and irrigation strategy, each evaluated for its capacity to raise productivity while limiting environmental cost. Research in this field investigates the response of cereals such as sorghum and maize and oilseeds such as sunflower to combined organic and inorganic fertiliser strategies, the role of residue retention in sustaining agriculture in semi-arid tropical systems, the adequacy of soil-testing frameworks for fertiliser recommendation, and the linkage between climate change, land degradation, and food security. Predictive and diagnostic tools, including spectroscopic and foliar models for yield estimation, also feature in efforts to optimise input decisions. The discipline matters for raising and stabilising food output under constrained land and nutrient resources. The journal publishes peer-reviewed Agronomy Research addressing soil fertility, crop nutrition, and sustainable production.
Research published in this journal
12 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Does Soil Testing for Fertiliser Recommendation Fall Short of a Soil Health Card?
Climate Change-Land Degradation-Food Security Nexus: Addressing India’s Challenge
Indian Agriculture needs a Strategic Shift for Improving Fertilizer Response and Overcome Sluggish Foodgrain Production
The Olive Quick Decline Syndrome: A Syndemic Outbreak in the Apulia Region, Southern Italy
Response of Sorghum Varieties to Organic and Inorganic Fertilizer Strategies in Sudan Savanna of Nigeria: Productivity, Nitrogen, and Water Use Efficiencies
Effect of Nitrogen Fertilizer on some Attributes of SorghumGrown in Saline Soil under Irrigation
Response of Some Sunflower (Helianthus annuusL) Hybrid Cultivars as Influenced by Argel (Solenostemmaargel, Del. Hayne) and Nitrogen Under Irrigation in Sudan
The Changing Scenario of Agriculture
Spectroscopic and Foliar pH Model for Yield Prediction in a Symbiotic Corn Production
Connecting the use of Biofertilizers on Maize silage or Meadows with Progress in Milk Quality and Economy
The Evaluation of Forage Silage Related Traits Between Maize and Hybrid Giant Napier (Pennisetum Hydridum)
How this research is being cited
The 12 articles above have been cited 96 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2026 · Agricultural Sciences
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2026 · Total Environment Microbiology
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2025 · Environmental Research: Food Systems
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2025 · African Journal of Biotechnology
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2025 · Forestry sciences
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2025 · Discover Soil.
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2025 · Land Use Policy
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2025 · Environmental Science and Pollution Research
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Potential Agronomic Benefits, linking to each citing work.