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Effect of water management on methane emission from a Japanese rice paddy field: Automated methane monitoring
Author(s) -
Yagi Kazuyuki,
Tsuruta Haruo,
Kanda Kenichi,
Minami Katsuyuki
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1029/96gb00517
Subject(s) - paddy field , drainage , methane , environmental science , hydrology (agriculture) , irrigation , flux (metallurgy) , agronomy , chemistry , geology , ecology , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry , biology
The effect of differing water management schemes on the emission of methane (CH 4 ) from rice paddies to the atmosphere was studied in a Japanese paddy field. Using an automated sampling and analyzing system, the test site was divided into two plots: a continuously flooded plot which was maintained flooded by constant irrigation from May to August, and an intermittently drained plot in which short‐term draining practices were performed several times during the flooding period . The draining practice had a strong effect on CH 4 emission. A large flush of CH 4 emission was observed in the intermittently drained plot immediately after each drainage. It was followed by a rapid decrease in CH 4 flux in most of the cases. A large flush of CH 4 was observed after the final drainage at the end of August in the continuously flooded plot, accounting for about 7% of the total CH 4 emitted in the plot. Total emission rates of CH 4 during the cultivation period were 14.8 and 8.63 g m −2 for 1991 and 9.49 and 5.18 g m −2 for 1993 in the continuously flooded and intermittently drained plots, respectively. Companion N 2 O flux measurements showed that almost no N 2 O was emitted from either plot until the final drainage. These results indicate that short‐term draining practices strongly reduce CH 4 emission from rice paddy fields, and that improvement in water management can be one of the most important mitigation strategies for CH 4 emission from rice paddy fields.