Nitrous oxide emissions from an annual crop rotation on poorly drained soil on the Canadian Prairies

Citation

Glenn, A.J., Tenuta, M., Amiro, B.D., Maas, S.E., and Wagner-Riddle, C. (2012). "Nitrous oxide emissions from an annual crop rotation on poorly drained soil on the Canadian Prairies.", Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 166-167, pp. 41-49. doi : 10.1016/j.agrformet.2012.06.015

Abstract

Agricultural soils are a significant anthropogenic source of nitrous oxide (N2O) to the atmosphere. Despite likely having large emissions of N2O, there are no continuous multi-year studies of emissions from poorly drained floodplain soil. In the present study, the micrometeorological flux of N2O (FN) was measured over three years (2006-2008) in a maize (Zea mays L.)/faba (Vicia faba minor L.)/spring-wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) rotation in the Red River Valley, Manitoba, Canada on a gleyed humic verticol soil. Comparison of newly established reduced and intensive tillage treatments showed no difference in FN within the constraints of the high variability between duplicate plots. The annual gap-filled ΣFN across tillage treatments was 5.5, 1.4, and 4.3kgNha-1 in the maize, faba, and spring-wheat crop years, respectively. Emissions from fertilizer N addition and soil thaw the following spring was responsible for the greater ΣFN in the maize and spring-wheat years. Using four approaches to approximate background ΣFN resulted in estimates of 3.5-3.8% and 1.4-1.8% of applied fertilizer N emitted as N2O for the maize and spring-wheat crops, respectively. The CO2 global warming potential equivalent of ΣFN over the three study years was an emission of 5.4MgCO2-equiv.ha-1 which adds to the previously determined C balance emission of 11.6MgCO2-equiv.ha-1. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.

Publication date

2012-12-15

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