Direct nitrous oxide emissions in Mediterranean climate cropping systems: Emission factors based on a meta-analysis of available measurement data

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2017-02-01
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Cayuela, Maria
Aguilera, Eduardo
Sanz-Cobena, Alberto
Adams, Dean
Abalos, Diego
Barton, Louise
Ryals, Rebecca
Silver, Whendee
Alfaro, Marta
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Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology

The Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology seeks to teach the studies of ecology (organisms and their environment), evolutionary theory (the origin and interrelationships of organisms), and organismal biology (the structure, function, and biodiversity of organisms). In doing this, it offers several majors which are codirected with other departments, including biology, genetics, and environmental sciences.

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The Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology was founded in 2003 as a merger of the Department of Botany, the Department of Microbiology, and the Department of Zoology and Genetics.

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2003–present

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Abstract

Many recent reviews and meta‐analyses of N2O emissions do not include data from Mediterranean studies. In this paper we present a meta‐analysis of the N2O emissions from Mediterranean cropping systems, and propose a more robust and reliable regional emission factor (EF) for N2O, distinguishing the effects of water management, crop type, and fertilizer management. The average overall EF for Mediterranean agriculture (EFMed) is 0.5%, which is substantially lower than the IPCC default value of 1%. Soil properties had no significant effect on EFs for N2O. Increasing the nitrogen fertilizer rate led to higher EFs; when N was applied at rates greater than 400 kg N ha–1, the EF did not significantly differ from the 1% default value (EF: 0.82%). Liquid slurries led to emissions that did not significantly differ from 1%; the other fertilizer types were lower than 1% but did not significantly differ from each other. Rain‐fed crops in Mediterranean regions have lower EFs (EF: 0.27%) than irrigated crops (EF: 0.63%). Drip irrigation systems (EF: 0.51%) had 44% lower EF than sprinkler irrigation methods (EF: 0.91%). Extensive crops, such as winter cereals (wheat, oat and barley), had lower EFs (EF: 0.26%) than intensive crops such as maize (EF: 0.83%). For flooded rice, the inundated environment favored anaerobic conditions leading to complete denitrification and low EFs (EF: 0.19%). Our results indicate that N2O emissions from Mediterranean agriculture are overestimated in current national greenhouse gas inventories and that, with the new EF determined from this study, the effect of mitigation strategies such as drip irrigation or the use of nitrification inhibitors, even if highly significant, may be smaller in absolute terms.

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This is a manucript of an artilce published as Cayuela, Maria L., Eduardo Aguilera, Alberto Sanz-Cobena, Dean C. Adams, Diego Abalos, Louise Barton, Rebecca Ryals et al. "Direct nitrous oxide emissions in Mediterranean climate cropping systems: Emission factors based on a meta-analysis of available measurement data." Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 238 (2017): 25-35. doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2016.10.006. Posted with permission.

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Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2016
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