Leslie Johnson

student, faculty
Graduate Student
Post-Baccalaureate
Work
57905 866 Rd Concord NE 68728-2828
US
Work 402-584-3818 On campus, dial 7-3818
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I am the Animal Manure Management Extension Educator at the University of Nebraska. My role includes facilitating article development for manure.unl.edu and manure-related articles in other publications. I manage the online manure course and annual manure trainings across the state of Nebraska, as well as other manure programming in the state. I also serve as the webinar coordinator for the Livestock and Poultry Environmental Learning Community (https://lpelc.org) and am actively involved in the leadership team of the Soil Health Nexus (https://soilhealthnexus.org).

icon-academic-capEducation

  • BS, University of Nebraska, 2006
  • MS, University of Nebraska, 2015

icon-bookmark-starAwards & Honors

  • Communication Award, National Association of County Agricultural Agents, 2021
  • Communication Award Finalist, National Association of County Agricultural Agents, 2021

UNL Extension Releases New Proso Millet Production Guide

June 27, 2008

Photo of the cover of EC137, Proso Millet production guide.Proso millet producers now have access to an updated and expanded Extension publication loaded with information on growing and selling the crop.

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Control Potato Leafhoppers In Alfalfa

June 27, 2008

Potato leafhoppers have arrived and are starting to injure alfalfa in many areas. These tiny, yellowish-green, wedge-shaped insects often blow into our region from the southeast in early to mid-summer.

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Seeding Forages Into Wheat Stubble

June 27, 2008

Wheat stubble can be an excellent seedbed for no-till planting forages such as alfalfa, turnips, or summer annual grasses. Soil moisture is conserved, erosion is reduced, weed seeds remain buried, and tillage expenses are eliminated.

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Storing Hay to Minimize Losses

June 27, 2008

Over one-fourth of your hay's nutrients can be lost due to weathering between now and feeding next winter. Taking steps now can help minimize this loss.

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Grassed Waterways a Standard for Erosion Control

June 27, 2008

Although not especially glamorous or flashy, grassed waterways should be part of an erosion control plan on nearly every farm. Unfortunately, as farm equipment has gotten larger and more land is farmed by one operator, grassed waterways have tended to go out of favor.

Designing Waterways

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Proper Maintenance Contributes to Windbreak Efficiency

June 27, 2008

Windbreaks need maintenance, especially during their first five years, if they are to give the protection they're designed to provide.

'Your goal is to protect and maintain the individual trees while at the same time maintaining the structure of the windbreak as a whole," said Steve Lyda, NRCS conservation forestry specialist.

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