NO and CO emissions following repeated application of organic and mineral N fertiliser from a vegetable crop rotation.

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2018
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Abstract
Accounting for nitrogen (N) release from organic amendments (OA) can reduce the use of synthetic N-fertiliser, sustain crop production, and potentially reduce soil borne greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions. However, it is difficult to assess the GHG mitigation potential for OA as a substitute of N-fertiliser over the long term due to only part of the organic N added to soil is being released in the first year after application. High-resolution nitrous oxide (NO) and carbon dioxide (CO) emissions monitored from a horticultural crop rotation over 2.5 years from conventional urea application rates were compared to treatments receiving an annual application of raw and composted chicken manure combined with conventional and reduced N-fertiliser rates. The repeated application of composted manure did not increase annual NO emissions while the application of raw manure resulted in NO emissions up to 35.2 times higher than the zero N fertiliser treatment and up to 4.7 times higher than conventional N-fertiliser rate due to an increase in C and N availability following the repeated application of raw OA. The main factor driving NO emissions was the incorporation of organic material accompanied by high soil moisture while the application of synthetic N-fertiliser induced only short-term NO emission pulse. The average annual NO emission factor calculated accounting for the total N applied including OA was equal to 0.27 ± 0.17%, 3.7 times lower than the IPCC default value. Accounting for the estimated N release from OA only enabled a more realistic NO emission factor to be defined for organically amended field that was equal to 0.48 ± 0.3%. This study demonstrated that accounting for the N released from repeated application of composted rather than raw manure can be a viable pathway to reduce NO emissions and maintain soil fertility.
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de-rosa2018nothe Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors De Rosa, Daniele;Rowlings, David W;Biala, Johannes;Scheer, Clemens;Basso, Bruno;Grace, Peter R;
Journal The Science of the total environment
Year 2018
DOI S0048-9697(18)31680-2
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