Publication | Closed Access
Nitrous oxide emission from soils after incorporating crop residues
436
Citations
32
References
2000
Year
EngineeringNitrous Oxide EmissionAgricultural EconomicsSoil ManagementLand DegradationEnvironmental ChemistrySoil PollutionSustainable AgricultureN 2Public HealthSoil FertilitySoil EnvironmentSoil GasBiogeochemistrySe ScotlandSoil ScienceG N 2Crop ProtectionFarming SystemsAir PollutionNutrient Management
Abstract. Emissions of N 2 O were measured from different agricultural systems in SE Scotland. N 2 O emissions increased temporarily after fertilization of arable crops, cultivation of bare soil, ploughing up of grassland and incorporation of arable and horticultural crop residues, but the effect was short‐lived. Most of the emission occurred during the first two weeks, returning to ‘background’ levels after 30–40 days. The highest flux was from N‐rich lettuce residues, 1100 g N 2 O‐N ha −1 being emitted over the first 14 days after incorporation by rotary tillage. The magnitude and pattern of emissions was strongly influenced by rainfall, soil mineral N, cultivation technique and C∶N ratio of the residue. Comparatively large emissions were measured after incorporation of material with low C∶N ratios. Management practices are recommended that would increase N‐use efficiency and reduce N 2 O emissions from agricultural soils.
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