Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment

Animal manure is rich in absorbable plant nutrients and an appropriate addition of manure into the soil respond to high crop productivity than use of commercial fertilizer. But volatilization of ammonia due to high temperature and leaching of nitrate, phosphorous and potassium into the soil due to r...

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Autores principales: Alemayehu, N., Masafu, M.M., Ebro, A., Tegegne, Azage
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Horizon Research Publishing Co., Ltd. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75762
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author Alemayehu, N.
Masafu, M.M.
Ebro, A.
Tegegne, Azage
author_browse Alemayehu, N.
Ebro, A.
Masafu, M.M.
Tegegne, Azage
author_facet Alemayehu, N.
Masafu, M.M.
Ebro, A.
Tegegne, Azage
author_sort Alemayehu, N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Animal manure is rich in absorbable plant nutrients and an appropriate addition of manure into the soil respond to high crop productivity than use of commercial fertilizer. But volatilization of ammonia due to high temperature and leaching of nitrate, phosphorous and potassium into the soil due to rainfall results in the loss of manure nutrients. The objective of this study was to assess manure nutrient loss and gaseous emissions due to inappropriate manure management. The study was conducted in central Ethiopian highland, east of the capital Addis Ababa. The study included laboratory analysis for manure nutrients contents from sampled units and the manure management type was captured through focus group discussions. Storage age has impacted on nutrient losses as a result the highest loss of N, P and K occurred in 2 to 3 years at the rate of 84%, 19% and 42% , respectively. The analysis of variance showed that at P<0.05, there was a significant difference in storage age for N and K, but there was no significant difference for P across different storage ages. Shade type and manure heap height has no significant impact on nutrient losses. The total carbon equivalent (CO2e) gas emitted per household per annum was estimated at 11, 276 kg CO2e (i.e. 8 200 kg CO2e came from methane directly released by livestock plus their manure, 2 694 CO2e came from N2O emissions from manure management and 381.48 kg CO2e came from CO2 released from manure burning) that is about 2 tons CO2e per capita per year, twice the value reported for Ethiopia emission in 2005. The largest emissions were from methane (72.6%), nitrous oxide (24%) and carbon (3.4%), this result appeal for a need to improve livestock and manure management systems under smallholders' agriculture in order to curb the challenges of global carbon release.
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spelling CGSpace757622025-11-13T10:38:44Z Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment Alemayehu, N. Masafu, M.M. Ebro, A. Tegegne, Azage livestock crops environment Animal manure is rich in absorbable plant nutrients and an appropriate addition of manure into the soil respond to high crop productivity than use of commercial fertilizer. But volatilization of ammonia due to high temperature and leaching of nitrate, phosphorous and potassium into the soil due to rainfall results in the loss of manure nutrients. The objective of this study was to assess manure nutrient loss and gaseous emissions due to inappropriate manure management. The study was conducted in central Ethiopian highland, east of the capital Addis Ababa. The study included laboratory analysis for manure nutrients contents from sampled units and the manure management type was captured through focus group discussions. Storage age has impacted on nutrient losses as a result the highest loss of N, P and K occurred in 2 to 3 years at the rate of 84%, 19% and 42% , respectively. The analysis of variance showed that at P<0.05, there was a significant difference in storage age for N and K, but there was no significant difference for P across different storage ages. Shade type and manure heap height has no significant impact on nutrient losses. The total carbon equivalent (CO2e) gas emitted per household per annum was estimated at 11, 276 kg CO2e (i.e. 8 200 kg CO2e came from methane directly released by livestock plus their manure, 2 694 CO2e came from N2O emissions from manure management and 381.48 kg CO2e came from CO2 released from manure burning) that is about 2 tons CO2e per capita per year, twice the value reported for Ethiopia emission in 2005. The largest emissions were from methane (72.6%), nitrous oxide (24%) and carbon (3.4%), this result appeal for a need to improve livestock and manure management systems under smallholders' agriculture in order to curb the challenges of global carbon release. 2015 2016-06-19T07:53:25Z 2016-06-19T07:53:25Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75762 en Open Access Horizon Research Publishing Co., Ltd. Alemayehu, N., Masafu, M.M., Ebro, A. and Tegegne, A. 2015. Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment. Environment and Ecology Research 3(4):82-88.
spellingShingle livestock
crops
environment
Alemayehu, N.
Masafu, M.M.
Ebro, A.
Tegegne, Azage
Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
title Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
title_full Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
title_fullStr Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
title_full_unstemmed Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
title_short Small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
title_sort small holders managed manure nutrient losses and their implications on environment
topic livestock
crops
environment
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75762
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AT masafumm smallholdersmanagedmanurenutrientlossesandtheirimplicationsonenvironment
AT ebroa smallholdersmanagedmanurenutrientlossesandtheirimplicationsonenvironment
AT tegegneazage smallholdersmanagedmanurenutrientlossesandtheirimplicationsonenvironment