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Mitigate N2O emissions while maintaining sugarcane yield using enhanced efficiency fertilisers and reduced nitrogen rates

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Reeves, S., Wang, W. and Ginns, S. (2023) Mitigate N2O emissions while maintaining sugarcane yield using enhanced efficiency fertilisers and reduced nitrogen rates. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems, n/a . ISSN 1573-0867

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Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10705-023-10323-8

Abstract

Conventional fertiliser nitrogen (N) inputs to sugarcane farming promote gaseous losses of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O). This study investigated the effects of a nitrification inhibitor coated urea (NICU) and a 50:50 blend (N wt%) of polymer coated urea and conventional urea (PCU + U), both at a sub-recommended rate (112 kg N ha−1), on N2O emissions and productivity in a sugarcane crop. Three rates of conventional urea (70%, 100% and 130% of the recommended rate at 160 kg N ha−1) were also assessed. Nitrous oxide emissions were measured over a 7.5-month sugarcane crop using automatic chambers. High N2O emissions (> 50 g N2O–N ha−1 d−1) occurred in the first 2 months after fertiliser application, and the variability in daily emissions was best described by a combination of pH, soil nitrate concentration, soil temperature, water filled pore space and soil ammonium concentration. The blended PCU + U resulted in 62% higher, but non-significant, net fertiliser-induced N2O emissions, while NICU significantly reduced net emissions by 81%, compared to conventional urea at the same rate (112 kg N ha−1). Net emissions from conventional urea increased linearly with increasing rate, with a mean emission factor of 2.6%. Thus, applying NICU at 70% of the recommended rate achieved the greatest N2O emission reduction compared to a PCU + U blend or conventional urea at the same N rate. There was no significant reduction in yield when the fertiliser N rate was reduced to 70%. Further field trials are required to ascertain whether the use of reduced N rates and/or enhanced efficiency fertilisers can mitigate N2O emissions while maintaining or increasing productivity in the long term.

Item Type:Article
Corporate Creators:Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Queensland
Business groups:Crop and Food Science
Subjects:Agriculture > Agriculture (General) > Agricultural ecology (General)
Agriculture > Agriculture (General) > Fertilisers
Plant culture > Field crops > Sugar plants
Live Archive:12 Jul 2024 01:37
Last Modified:12 Jul 2024 01:37

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