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The use of biogeochemical models to evaluate mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions from managed grasslands.

Authors :
Sándor, Renáta
Ehrhardt, Fiona
Brilli, Lorenzo
Carozzi, Marco
Recous, Sylvie
Smith, Pete
Snow, Val
Soussana, Jean-François
Dorich, Christopher D.
Fuchs, Kathrin
Fitton, Nuala
Gongadze, Kate
Klumpp, Katja
Liebig, Mark
Martin, Raphaël
Merbold, Lutz
Newton, Paul C.D.
Rees, Robert M.
Rolinski, Susanne
Bellocchi, Gianni
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Nov2018, Vol. 642, p292-306. 15p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Simulation models quantify the impacts on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling in grassland systems caused by changes in management practices. To support agricultural policies, it is however important to contrast the responses of alternative models, which can differ greatly in their treatment of key processes and in their response to management. We applied eight biogeochemical models at five grassland sites (in France, New Zealand, Switzerland, United Kingdom and United States) to compare the sensitivity of modelled C and N fluxes to changes in the density of grazing animals (from 100% to 50% of the original livestock densities), also in combination with decreasing N fertilization levels (reduced to zero from the initial levels). Simulated multi-model median values indicated that input reduction would lead to an increase in the C sink strength (negative net ecosystem C exchange) in intensive grazing systems: −64 ± 74 g C m −2  yr −1 (animal density reduction) and −81 ± 74 g C m −2  yr −1 (N and animal density reduction), against the baseline of −30.5 ± 69.5 g C m −2  yr −1 (LSU [livestock units] ≥ 0.76 ha −1  yr −1 ). Simulations also indicated a strong effect of N fertilizer reduction on N fluxes, e.g. N 2 O-N emissions decreased from 0.34 ± 0.22 (baseline) to 0.1 ± 0.05 g N m −2  yr −1 (no N fertilization). Simulated decline in grazing intensity had only limited impact on the N balance. The simulated pattern of enteric methane emissions was dominated by high model-to-model variability. The reduction in simulated offtake (animal intake + cut biomass) led to a doubling in net primary production per animal (increased by 11.6 ± 8.1 t C LSU −1  yr −1 across sites). The highest N 2 O-N intensities (N 2 O-N/offtake) were simulated at mown and extensively grazed arid sites. We show the possibility of using grassland models to determine sound mitigation practices while quantifying the uncertainties associated with the simulated outputs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
642
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
130837023
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.06.020