Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms

Greenhouse gas (CH4 and N2O) emissions from rice paddy fields amended by differently treated manure and crop residue inputs [fresh manure (FM), composted manure (CM), liquid biogas digestate from manure (D), D mixed with biochar (D ? B) or D mixed with rice straw and composted before application (CD...

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Main Authors: Vu, Quynh Duong, Neergaard, Andreas de, Tran T, Hoang Q, Ly, Proyuth, Jensen L
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69140
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author Vu, Quynh Duong
Neergaard, Andreas de
Tran T
Hoang Q
Ly, Proyuth
Jensen L
author_browse Hoang Q
Jensen L
Ly, Proyuth
Neergaard, Andreas de
Tran T
Vu, Quynh Duong
author_facet Vu, Quynh Duong
Neergaard, Andreas de
Tran T
Hoang Q
Ly, Proyuth
Jensen L
author_sort Vu, Quynh Duong
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Greenhouse gas (CH4 and N2O) emissions from rice paddy fields amended by differently treated manure and crop residue inputs [fresh manure (FM), composted manure (CM), liquid biogas digestate from manure (D), D mixed with biochar (D ? B) or D mixed with rice straw and composted before application (CD ? RS)], were compared in a field experiment, also including two mineral nitrogen fertiliser controls (N1, N2). The trial was performed on a degraded soil in Bac Giang Province in northern Vietnam with a three-crop per year rotation (summer rice–maize–spring rice). CH4 and N2O fluxes from the two rice crops were measured using static chambers. Fluxes of N2O were below or close to the detection limit at nearly all sampling times in both seasons and therefore considered negligible. However, the CH4 emissions were significant and their temporal pattern differed markedly between the rice seasons. In the summer rice season, the D ? B ? N1 and D ? N1 treatments had significantly lower cumulative CH4 emissions (156 and 162 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1) than CM ? N1, CD ? RS ? N1 and FM ? N1 treatments (217, 283 and 288 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1, respectively). In the spring rice season, CH4 emissions were generally much lower, and the D ? B ? N1 and D ? N1 treatments emitted significantly less CH4 (44 and 72 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1) in comparison with treatments amended with FM ? N1, CD ? RS ? N1 and CM ? N1 (89, 124 and 137 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1, respectively). Treatments amended with D ? B ? N1 or D ? N1 therefore had the lowest emissions of methane per unit of rice grain yield.
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spelling CGSpace691402024-08-27T10:35:49Z Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms Vu, Quynh Duong Neergaard, Andreas de Tran T Hoang Q Ly, Proyuth Jensen L methane composts straw Greenhouse gas (CH4 and N2O) emissions from rice paddy fields amended by differently treated manure and crop residue inputs [fresh manure (FM), composted manure (CM), liquid biogas digestate from manure (D), D mixed with biochar (D ? B) or D mixed with rice straw and composted before application (CD ? RS)], were compared in a field experiment, also including two mineral nitrogen fertiliser controls (N1, N2). The trial was performed on a degraded soil in Bac Giang Province in northern Vietnam with a three-crop per year rotation (summer rice–maize–spring rice). CH4 and N2O fluxes from the two rice crops were measured using static chambers. Fluxes of N2O were below or close to the detection limit at nearly all sampling times in both seasons and therefore considered negligible. However, the CH4 emissions were significant and their temporal pattern differed markedly between the rice seasons. In the summer rice season, the D ? B ? N1 and D ? N1 treatments had significantly lower cumulative CH4 emissions (156 and 162 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1) than CM ? N1, CD ? RS ? N1 and FM ? N1 treatments (217, 283 and 288 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1, respectively). In the spring rice season, CH4 emissions were generally much lower, and the D ? B ? N1 and D ? N1 treatments emitted significantly less CH4 (44 and 72 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1) in comparison with treatments amended with FM ? N1, CD ? RS ? N1 and CM ? N1 (89, 124 and 137 kg CH4 ha-1 crop-1, respectively). Treatments amended with D ? B ? N1 or D ? N1 therefore had the lowest emissions of methane per unit of rice grain yield. 2015-12 2015-12-07T10:30:06Z 2015-12-07T10:30:06Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69140 en Open Access Springer Vu Q, de Neergaard A, Tran T, Hoang Q, Ly P, Tran T, Jensen L. 2015. Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems. 103:329–346.
spellingShingle methane
composts
straw
Vu, Quynh Duong
Neergaard, Andreas de
Tran T
Hoang Q
Ly, Proyuth
Jensen L
Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
title Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
title_full Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
title_fullStr Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
title_full_unstemmed Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
title_short Manure, biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on Vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
title_sort manure biogas digestate and crop residue management affects methane gas emissions from rice paddy fields on vietnamese smallholder livestock farms
topic methane
composts
straw
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/69140
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