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William M. Deen

William M. Deen

· Professor of Chemical Engineering, Emeritus

Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Chemical Engineering

Active 1973–2024

h-index89
Citations24.3k
Papers30210 last 5y
Funding$47.7M
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Research topics

  • Environmental science
  • Agroforestry
  • Biology
  • Agronomy
  • Ecology
  • Soil science
  • Business
  • Natural resource economics
  • Geography
  • Economics
  • Environmental resource management

Selected publications

  • Long-term crop rotation diversification enhances maize drought resistance through soil organic matter

    Environmental Research Letters · 2021 · 103 citations

    • Environmental science
    • Agronomy
    • Agroforestry

    Abstract Climate change adaptation requires building agricultural system resilience to warmer, drier climates. Increasing temporal plant diversity through crop rotation diversification increases yields of some crops under drought, but its potential to enhance crop drought resistance and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We conducted a drought manipulation experiment using rainout shelters embedded within a 36-year crop rotation diversity and no-till experiment in a temperate climate and measured a suite of soil and crop developmental and eco-physiological traits in the field and laboratory. We show that diversifying maize-soybean rotations with small grain cereals and cover crops mitigated maize water stress at the leaf and canopy scales and reduced yield losses to drought by 17.1 ± 6.1%, while no-till did not affect maize drought resistance. Path analysis showed a strong correlation between soil organic matter and lower maize water stress despite no significant differences in soil organic matter between rotations or tillage treatments. This positive relationship between soil organic matter and maize water status was not mediated by higher soil water retention or infiltration as often hypothesized, nor differential depth of root water uptake as measured with stable isotopes, suggesting that other mechanisms are at play. Crop rotation diversification is an underappreciated drought management tool to adapt crop production to climate change through managing for soil organic matter.

  • Long-Term Evidence Shows that Crop-Rotation Diversification Increases Agricultural Resilience to Adverse Growing Conditions in North America

    One Earth · 2020 · 491 citations

    • Environmental science
    • Geography
    • Agroforestry

    Diversifying cropping systems improves environmental health and has the potential to reduce risk from climate-change-related threats, but empirical evidence remains sparse. In this study, we found that maize yields were higher during adverse weather, including droughts, when maize was grown as part of a more diverse rotation. Rotation diversification also increased maize yields over time and under better growing conditions. Policies that support more diversified cropping systems could help reduce risk from increasingly stressful weather.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Barry M. Brenner

    Harvard University

    191 shared
  • Bryan D. Myers

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    92 shared
  • Julia L. Troy

    University of California, San Francisco

    90 shared
  • C R Robertson

    Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

    82 shared
  • Richard J. Glassock

    72 shared
  • Cathy Bennett

    Medical University of South Carolina

    60 shared
  • Charles R. Bridges

    53 shared
  • Blake B. Rasmussen

    52 shared

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