1. Is Crop Residue Removal to Reduce N 2 O Emissions Driven by Quality or Quantity? A Field Study and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Essich, Lisa, Nkebiwe, Peteh Mehdi, Schneider, Moritz, and Ruser, Reiner
- Subjects
CROP residues ,BEETS ,SUGAR beets ,FIELD research ,REDUCTION potential ,NITROUS oxide - Abstract
In order to quantify the reduction potential for nitrous oxide (N
2 O) release from arable soils through the removal of crop residues, we conducted an experiment after sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) harvest with three treatments: (i) ploughing of the crop residues (+CR:D), (ii) returning residues after ploughing on the surface (+CR:S), and (iii) removal of the residues and ploughing (−CR). N2 O fluxes were measured over 120 days in south Germany. High positive correlations between N2 O fluxes and the CO2 fluxes and soil nitrate contents suggested denitrification as the main N2 O source. N2 O emissions in +CR:D was higher than in +CR:S (2.39 versus 0.93 kg N2 O−N ha−1 120 d−1 in +CR:D and +CR:S). Residue removal in −CR reduced the N2 O emission compared to +CR:D by 95% and to +CR:S by 87%. We further conducted a meta-analysis on the effect of crop residue removal on N2 O emissions, where we included 176 datasets from arable soils with mainly rain fed crops. The overall effect of residue removal showed a N2 O reduction of 11%. The highest N2 O reduction of 76% was calculated for the removal subgroup with C/N-ratio < 25. Neither the remaining C/N-ratio subgroups nor the grouping variables "tillage" or "residue quantity" differed within their subgroup. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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