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Annual greenhouse gas emissions from a rice paddy with different water-nitrogen management strategies in Central China.

Authors :
Li, Jianling
Li, Yu'e
Wan, Yunfan
Wang, Bin
Cai, Weiwei
Qin, Xiaobo
Zhou, Zhihua
Wang, Xingyu
Yuan, Jianing
Deng, Qi
Source :
Soil & Tillage Research. Jan2024, Vol. 235, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Current water-nitrogen (N) management strategies are necessary to be improved to increase crop productivity while reducing environmental costs. However, the effects of improved water-N management strategies on paddy CH 4 and N 2 O emissions simultaneously generated during the growing and non-growing seasons have not been explored. Therefore, in this study, four water-N management practices—urea plus conventional irrigation (UREA+CI), urea plus alternate wetting-drying irrigation (UREA+AWD), controlled-release N fertilizer plus CI (CRNF+CI), and CRNF plus AWD (CRNF+AWD)—were evaluated in a 3-year field experiment following a randomized complete block design with three replications each. The results demonstrated that during rice growing seasons, CH 4 emissions significantly decreased by 12.6–44.9% under UREA+AWD and by 17.2–32.1% under CRNF+CI, compared to UREA+CI, respectively, and CRNF+SWD showed the highest mitigation potential. N 2 O emissions were reduced in CRNF treatments (CRNF+CI and CRNF+AWD) but increased by replacing CI with AWD during rice growing seasons, suggesting the potential effects of water regimes on N 2 O emissions. Furthermore, AWD and CRNF reduced CH 4 emissions during the land preparation period before the late rice growing season and the fallow period, whereas CRNF treatments triggered the release of N 2 O in the fallow period. Moreover, there were no significant differences in soil organic carbon sequestration rates among the treatments. The results indicated that AWD, CRNF and their combination significantly reduced annual net total greenhouse gas emissions without yield loss. Collectively, this study unravels the potential of alternative water-N management strategies to improve rice yields while minimizing GHG emissions in double rice cropping systems. • AWD, CRNF and their combination significantly reduced CH 4 emissions. • CRNF had opposite effects on N 2 O emissions in growing and non-growing seasons. • CRNF promoted annual N 2 O emissions. • AWD-CRNF combined practices minimized GHGI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01671987
Volume :
235
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Soil & Tillage Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173278604
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.still.2023.105906