Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Manure and Inorganic Fertilizers Applied to Spring Barley
1999
Petersen, S. O.
Nitrous oxide emissions from soil amended with untreated liquid manure (slurry), anaerobically digested slurry, or inorganic fertilizers (calcium ammonium nitrate or urea) were quantified in a field study covering two growth seasons of spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). In the first year incorporation before seeding was compared with trail hose application 5 wk after seeding. In the second year all fertilizers were applied before seeding, while soil moisture and initial NO⁻₃ availability was varied. Accumulated N₂O losses between the time of fertilization and ca. 1 July represented 0.14 to 0.35% of total N in 1996 and 0.34 to 0.64% in 1997. In both years the highest N₂O emissions were observed with untreated slurry, whereas digested slurry and inorganic fertilizers were at a similar level. Increasing the soil moisture content or NO⁻₃ availability had no significant effect on accumulated N₂O losses. Although metabolizable C may thus have stimulated N₂O emissions via denitrification from untreated slurry, the largest contribution to N₂O fluxes probably came from nitrification with all fertilizer types. Using the IPCC guidelines it was estimated that anaerobic digestion of slurry per se could potentially reduce N₂O emissions from Danish agriculture by 1.2 to 2.5%.
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