Replication Data for: Adequate vegetative cover decreases nitrous oxide emissions from cattle urine deposited in grazed pastures under rainy season conditions

The new Latin America Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Network (LAMNET) is a regional subsidiary of The Climate Food and Farming Research Network (CLIFF), an international research network that helps to build the capacity of young researchers working on climate change mitigation in smallholder farming. The...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chirinda, Ngonidzashe, Loaiza, Sandra, Arenas Calle, Laura N., Ruíz, Verónica, Faverín, Claudia, Álvarez, Carolina, Savian, Jean Víctor, Belfon, Renaldo, Zuñiga, Karen, Morales, Luis, Trujillo, Catalina, Arango, Miguel, Rao, Idupulapati M., Arango, Jacobo, Peters, Michael, Barahona Rosales, Rolando, Costa, Ciniro, Rosenstock, Todd S., Richards, Meryl B., Martínez Barón, Deissy, Cárdenas, Laura
Format: Conjunto de datos
Language:Inglés
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96268
Description
Summary:The new Latin America Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Network (LAMNET) is a regional subsidiary of The Climate Food and Farming Research Network (CLIFF), an international research network that helps to build the capacity of young researchers working on climate change mitigation in smallholder farming. The objective of the network is to enhance regional capacity to conduct mitigation research. Experiments at seven sites in five countries of LAC region compared emissions from paired pastures with low vegetative cover and adequate vegetative cover based on a combination of estimates of aboveground biomass and local farmer assessments. Were quantified N2O emissions from simulated cattle urine patches with closed static chamber methodology. • Major variables: Urine content (Kg N ha-1), Daily flux (mg N2O m-2 d-1), Accumulated fluxes (Kg N _ N2O ha-1), Emission factor _ urine.