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Dive into the research topics where Willie Towers is active.

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Featured researches published by Willie Towers.


Environmental Pollution | 2013

Concentrations and geographic distribution of selected organic pollutants in Scottish surface soils.

Stewart M. Rhind; Carol E. Kyle; Christine Kerr; M. Osprey; Zulin Zhang; E. I. Duff; Allan Lilly; A. Nolan; Gordon Hudson; Willie Towers; J. S. Bell; Malcolm Coull; Craig McKenzie

Concentrations of selected persistent organic pollutants (POPs) representing three chemical classes (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) and the organic pollutant diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP), were determined in surface soil samples (0-5 cm) collected at 20 km grid intersects throughout Scotland over a three-year period. Detectable amounts of all chemical classes and most individual congeners were present in all samples. There were no consistent effects of soil or vegetation type, soil carbon content, pH, altitude or distance from centres of population on concentrations which exhibited extreme variation, even in adjacent samples. It is concluded that soil POPs and DEHP concentrations and associated rates of animal and human exposure were highly variable, influenced by multiple, interacting factors, and not clearly related to local sources but possibly related to wet atmospheric deposition and the organic carbon content of the soil.


Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh | 2012

Land use and a low-carbon society

Colin D. Campbell; Allan Lilly; Willie Towers; Stephen J. Chapman; Alan Werritty; Nick Hanley

Land use and the management of our natural resources such as soils and water offer great opportunities to sequester carbon and mitigate the effects of climate change. Actions on forestry, soil carbon and damaged peatlands each have the potential to reduce Scottish emissions in 2020 by hundreds of thousands of tonnes. Most actions to reduce emissions from land use have beneficial effects on other ecosystem services, so if we can cut emissions we can in many circum- stances improve the environment. The cost of reducing emissions through land use change can be low in relation to other means of cutting emissions. The Scottish Land Use Strategy and the Eco- system Approach it calls for, employing the concept of ecosystem services, offers a way of balancing environmental, social and economic demands on the land. Scotlands land, soils, forests and waters are all likely to be significantly altered by future climate change. Each of these components of the land-based environment offers opportunities for mitigation and adaptation to climate change. The emerging new imperatives for securing food, water and energy at a global level are equally impor- tant for Scotland, and interact with the need for environmental security and for dealing with climate change.


Climate Research | 2010

Estimating changes in Scottish soil carbon stocks using ECOSSE. I. Model description and uncertainties

Joanne Ursula Smith; Pia Gottschalk; Jessica Bellarby; Stephen J. Chapman; Allan Lilly; Willie Towers; John Bell; K. Coleman; Dali Rani Nayak; M. Richards; Jonathan Hillier; Helen Flynn; Martin Wattenbach; Matt Aitkenhead; Jagadeesh Yeluripati; Jennifer Ann Farmer; R. Milne; Amanda Thomson; Chris D. Evans; A. P. Whitmore; Pete Falloon; Pete Smith


European Journal of Soil Science | 2013

Comparison of soil carbon stocks in Scottish soils between 1978 and 2009

Stephen J. Chapman; J. S. Bell; Colin D. Campbell; Gordon Hudson; Allan Lilly; A. Nolan; A. H. J. Robertson; Jacqueline M. Potts; Willie Towers


Climate Research | 2008

Influence of climate change on agricultural land-use potential: adapting and updating the land capability system for Scotland

Iain Brown; Willie Towers; M. Rivington; Helaina Black


Archive | 2007

ECOSSE - Estimating Carbon in Organic Soils Sequestration and Emissions: Final Report

Pete Smith; Jo Smith; Helen Flynn; Ken Killham; Ignacio Rangel-Castro; Bente Foereid; Matt Aitkenhead; Steve Chapman; Willie Towers; John Bell; David G. Lumsdon; Ronald Milne; Amanda Thomson; I. Simmons; U. Skiba; Brian Reynolds; Chris D. Evans; Z. L. Frogbrook; Ian Bradley; A. P. Whitmore; Pete Falloon


Soil & Tillage Research | 2015

Mitigating arable soil compaction: A review and analysis of available cost and benefit data

W.C. Tim Chamen; Andrew P. Moxey; Willie Towers; Bedru Babulo Balana; Paul D. Hallett


Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability | 2012

Soil Information in Support of Policy Making and Awareness Raising

Johan Bouma; Gabriele Broll; Todd A. Crane; Olivier Dewitte; Ciro Gardi; R.P.O. Schulte; Willie Towers


Soil & Tillage Research | 2013

Application of Bayesian Belief Networks to quantify and map areas at risk to soil threats: Using soil compaction as an example

Mads Troldborg; Inge Aalders; Willie Towers; Paul D. Hallett; Blair M. McKenzie; A. Glyn Bengough; Allan Lilly; Bruce C. Ball; Rupert L. Hough


Soil Use and Management | 2012

A review of the role of excess soil moisture conditions in constraining farm practices under Atlantic conditions

R.P.O. Schulte; Reamonn Fealy; Rachel E. Creamer; Willie Towers; T. Harty; R. J. A. Jones

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Allan Lilly

James Hutton Institute

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Iain Brown

James Hutton Institute

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A. Nolan

James Hutton Institute

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