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  1. Article: Postharvest nitrous oxide emissions from a subtropical oxisol as influenced by summer crop residues and their management

    Escobar, Luisa Fernanda(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PPG Ciência do Solo) / Amado, Telmo Jorge Carneiro(Universidade Federal de Santa Maria Departamento de Solos) / Bayer, Cimélio(UFRGS Departamento de Solos) / Chavez, Luis Fernando(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PPG Ciência do Solo) / Zanatta, Josiléia Acordi(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PPG Ciência do Solo) / Fiorin, Jackson Ernani(FUNDACEP)

    Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo

    2010/04  

    Abstract: Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the most important non-CO2 greenhouse gas and soil management systems should be evaluated for their N2O mitigation potential. This research evaluated a long-term (22 years) experiment testing the effect of soil management systems ... ...

    Abstract Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the most important non-CO2 greenhouse gas and soil management systems should be evaluated for their N2O mitigation potential. This research evaluated a long-term (22 years) experiment testing the effect of soil management systems on N2O emissions in the postharvest period (autumn) from a subtropical Rhodic Hapludox at the research center FUNDACEP, in Cruz Alta, state of Rio Grande do Sul. Three treatments were evaluated, one under conventional tillage with soybean residues (CTsoybean) and two under no-tillage with soybean (NTsoybean) and maize residues (NTmaize). N2O emissions were measured eight times within 24 days (May 2007) using closed static chambers. Gas flows were obtained based on the relations between gas concentrations in the chamber at regular intervals (0, 15, 30, 45 min) analyzed by gas chromatography. After soybean harvest, accumulated N2O emissions in the period were approximately three times higher in the untilled soil (164 mg m-2 N) than under CT (51 mg m-2 N), with a short-lived N2O peak of 670 mg m-2 h-1 N. In contrast, soil N2O emissions in NT were lower after maize than after soybean, with a N2O peak of 127 g m-2 h-1 N. The multivariate analysis of N2O fluxes and soil variables, which were determined simultaneously with air sampling, demonstrated that the main driving variables of soil N2O emissions were soil microbial activity, temperature, water-filled pore space, and NO3- content. To replace soybean monoculture, crop rotation including maize must be considered as a strategy to decrease soil N2O emissions from NT soils in Southern Brazil in a Autumn.
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 0100-0683
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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  2. Article: Postharvest nitrous oxide emissions from a subtropical oxisol as influenced by summer crop residues and their management

    Escobar, Luisa Fernanda(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PPG Ciência do Solo) / Amado, Telmo Jorge Carneiro(Universidade Federal de Santa Maria Departamento de Solos) / Bayer, Cimélio(UFRGS Departamento de Solos) / Chavez, Luis Fernando(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PPG Ciência do Solo) / Zanatta, Josiléia Acordi(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PPG Ciência do Solo) / Fiorin, Jackson Ernani(FUNDACEP)

    Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo

    2010/04  

    Abstract: Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the most important non-CO2 greenhouse gas and soil management systems should be evaluated for their N2O mitigation potential. This research evaluated a long-term (22 years) experiment testing the effect of soil management systems ... ...

    Abstract Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the most important non-CO2 greenhouse gas and soil management systems should be evaluated for their N2O mitigation potential. This research evaluated a long-term (22 years) experiment testing the effect of soil management systems on N2O emissions in the postharvest period (autumn) from a subtropical Rhodic Hapludox at the research center FUNDACEP, in Cruz Alta, state of Rio Grande do Sul. Three treatments were evaluated, one under conventional tillage with soybean residues (CTsoybean) and two under no-tillage with soybean (NTsoybean) and maize residues (NTmaize). N2O emissions were measured eight times within 24 days (May 2007) using closed static chambers. Gas flows were obtained based on the relations between gas concentrations in the chamber at regular intervals (0, 15, 30, 45 min) analyzed by gas chromatography. After soybean harvest, accumulated N2O emissions in the period were approximately three times higher in the untilled soil (164 mg m-2 N) than under CT (51 mg m-2 N), with a short-lived N2O peak of 670 mg m-2 h-1 N. In contrast, soil N2O emissions in NT were lower after maize than after soybean, with a N2O peak of 127 g m-2 h-1 N. The multivariate analysis of N2O fluxes and soil variables, which were determined simultaneously with air sampling, demonstrated that the main driving variables of soil N2O emissions were soil microbial activity, temperature, water-filled pore space, and NO3- content. To replace soybean monoculture, crop rotation including maize must be considered as a strategy to decrease soil N2O emissions from NT soils in Southern Brazil in a Autumn.
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 0100-0683
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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    Kategorien

  3. Article: Carbon dioxide efflux in a rhodic hapludox as affected by tillage systems in southern Brazil

    Chavez, Luis Fernando(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul PGCS) / Amado, Telmo Jorge Carneiro(Universidade Federal de Santa Maria) / Bayer, Cimélio(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul) / La Scala, Newton Junior(Universidade Estadual Paulista) / Escobar, Luisa Fernanda(UFRGS PPGCS) / Fiorin, Jackson Ernani(FUNDACEP) / Campos, Ben-Hur Costa de(UNICRUZ)

    Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo

    2009/04  

    Abstract: Agricultural soils can act as a source or sink of atmospheric C, according to the soil management. This long-term experiment (22 years) was evaluated during 30 days in autumn, to quantify the effect of tillage systems (conventional tillage-CT and no-till- ...

    Abstract Agricultural soils can act as a source or sink of atmospheric C, according to the soil management. This long-term experiment (22 years) was evaluated during 30 days in autumn, to quantify the effect of tillage systems (conventional tillage-CT and no-till-NT) on the soil CO2-C flux in a Rhodic Hapludox in Rio Grande do Sul State, Southern Brazil. A closed-dynamic system (Flux Chamber 6400-09, Licor) and a static system (alkali absorption) were used to measure soil CO2-C flux immediately after soybean harvest. Soil temperature and soil moisture were measured simultaneously with CO2-C flux, by Licor-6400 soil temperature probe and manual TDR, respectively. During the entire month, a CO2-C emission of less than 30 % of the C input through soybean crop residues was estimated. In the mean of a 30 day period, the CO2-C flux in NT soil was similar to CT, independent of the chamber type used for measurements. Differences in tillage systems with dynamic chamber were verified only in short term (daily evaluation), where NT had higher CO2-C flux than CT at the beginning of the evaluation period and lower flux at the end. The dynamic chamber was more efficient than the static chamber in capturing variations in CO2-C flux as a function of abiotic factors. In this chamber, the soil temperature and the water-filled pore space (WFPS), in the NT soil, explained 83 and 62 % of CO2-C flux, respectively. The Q10 factor, which evaluates CO2-C flux dependence on soil temperature, was estimated as 3.93, suggesting a high sensitivity of the biological activity to changes in soil temperature during fall season. The CO2-C flux measured in a closed dynamic chamber was correlated with the static alkali adsorption chamber only in the NT system, although the values were underestimated in comparison to the other, particularly in the case of high flux values. At low soil temperature and WFPS conditions, soil tillage caused a limited increase in soil CO2-C flux.
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 0100-0683
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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    Kategorien

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