Emissions of CO2, N2O,and NO in conventional and no-till management practices in Rondônia,Brazil |
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Authors: | Passianoto Caio Cesar Ahrens Toby Feigl Brigitte J. Steudler Paul A. do Carmo Janaina B. Melillo Jerry M. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura, CENA/USP, Caixa Postal 96, CEP 13400-970 Piracicaba-SP, Brazil;(2) The Ecosystem Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA |
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Abstract: | Efforts to restore productivity of pastures often employ agricultural management regimes involving either tillage or no-tillage options combined with various combinations of fertilizer application, herbicide use and the planting of a cash crop prior to the planting of forage grasses. Here we report on the emissions of CO2, N2O and NO from the initial phases (first 6 months) of three treatments in central Rondônia. The treatments were (1) control; (2) conventional tillage followed by planting of forage grass (Brachiaria brizantha) and fertilizer additions; (3) no-tillage/herbicide treatment followed by two plantings, the first being a cash crop of rice followed by forage grass. In treatment 3, the rice was fertilized. Relative to the control, tillage increased CO2 emission by 37% over the first 2 months, while the no-tillage/herbicide regime decreased CO2 emissions by 7% over the same period. The cumulative N2O emissions over the first 2 months from the tillage regime (0.94 kg N ha–1) were much higher than the N2O releases from either the no-tillage/herbicide regime (0.64 kg N ha–1) or the control treatment (0.04 kg N ha–1). The highest levels of N2O fluxes from both management regimes were observed following N fertilizations. The cumulative NO releases over the first 2 months were largest in the tillage treatment (0.98 kg N ha–1), intermediate in the no-tillage treatment (0.72 kg N ha–1), and smallest in the control treatment (0.12 kg N ha–1). For the first week following fertilization the percentage of fertilizer N lost as N2O plus NO was 1.0% for the tillage treatment and 3.0% for the no-tillage treatment. |
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Keywords: | Tillage No-tillage Trace gas Pasture reformation |
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