Prof. Dr. Zoltán Nagy - MATE Research
		Overview
	
Research activities included studying plant ecophysiological responses to drougth and salinity stresses with investigations carried out mainly on grasslands and arable lands. He contributed to desicaction tolerance studies by analysing plant water relation, chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf scale gas exchange responses during the dehydration and rehydartion process. His further main research topics include ecosystem scale gas exchange, field scale evapotranspiration and Sun induced fluorescence.
Research keywords:
		Publications
	
Nagy, Z., Balogh, J., Petrás, D., Fóti, S., MacArthur, A., & Pintér, K. (2024). Detecting drought 
stress occurrence using synergies between Sun induced fluorescence and vegetation surface 
temperature spatial records. Science of the Total Environment, 907. 
https://doi.org/10.1016/J.SCITOTENV.2023.168053 
Pintér, K., & Nagy, Z. (2022). Building a UAV Based System to Acquire High Spatial 
Resolution Thermal Imagery for Energy Balance Modelling. Sensors, 22(9). 
https://doi.org/10.3390/S22093251, Q1
Nagy, Z., Pintér, K., Czóbel, Sz., Balogh, J., Horváth, L., Fóti, Sz., Barcza, Z., Weidinger, T., 
Csintalan, Zs., Dinh, N. Q., Grosz, B., & Tuba, Z. (2007). The carbon budget of semi-arid 
grassland in a wet and a dry year in Hungary. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 121(1–
2). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2006.12.003, Q1
Nagy, Z., Pintér, K., Pavelka, M., Darenová, E., & Balogh, J. (2011). Carbon fluxes of surfaces 
vs. ecosystems: advantages of measuring eddy covariance and soil respiration simultaneously 
in dry grassland ecosystems. Biogeosciences, 8(9), 2523–2534. Q1
Hidy, D., Barcza, Z., MarjanoviÄ, H., Sever, M. Z. O., Dobor, L., Gelybó, G., Fodor, N., Pintér, 
K., Churkina, G., Running, S., Thornton, P., Bellocchi, G., Haszpra, L., Horváth, F., Suyker, A., 
& Nagy, Z. (2016). Terrestrial ecosystem process model Biome-BGCMuSo v4.0: Summary of 
improvements and new modeling possibilities. Geoscientific Model Development, 9(12). 
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-4405-2016 , D1
Koncz, P., Pintér, K., Balogh, J., Papp, M., Hidy, D., Csintalan, Z., Molnár, E., Szaniszló, A., 
Kampfl, G., Horváth, L., & Nagy, Z. (2017). Extensive grazing in contrast to mowing is climate-friendly based on the farm-scale greenhouse gas balance. Agriculture, Ecosystems and 
Environment, 240, 121–134. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2017.02.022, Q1
		Projects
	
Spatiotemporal variabiility in ecosystem functioning, European Space agency, 2019 2021
HUN-REN_MATE Agroecology Research Group, 2019-2024, supported by TKI

 
	

