Publication | Closed Access
Reduced methane emissions from large‐scale changes in water management of China's rice paddies during 1980–2000
183
Citations
40
References
2002
Year
Global Atmospheric MethaneEngineeringEnvironmental ImpactsMidseason Paddy DrainageGreenhouse Gas EmissionAgricultural EconomicsLand DegradationBiogeochemical ModelEarth ScienceClimate ModellingTerrestrial EcosystemAgricultural Water ManagementPublic HealthClimate-smart AgricultureClimate ChangeRice PaddiesPaddy RiceEmission ReductionLarge‐scale ChangesWater ManagementAgricultural Emissions
Decreased methane emissions from paddy rice may have contributed to the decline in the rate of increase of global atmospheric methane (CH 4 ) concentration over the last 20 years. In China, midseason paddy drainage, which reduces growing season CH 4 fluxes, was first implemented in the early 1980s, and has gradually replaced continuous flooding in much of the paddy area. We constructed a regional prediction for China's rice paddy methane emissions using the DNDC biogeochemical model. Results of continuous flooding and midseason drainage simulations for all paddy fields in China were combined with regional scenarios for the timing of the transition from continuous flooding to predominantly mid‐season drainage to generate estimates of total methane flux for 1980–2000. CH 4 emissions from China's paddy fields were reduced over that period by ∼5 Tg CH 4 yr −1 .
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