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Initial nitrous oxide, carbon dioxide, and methane costs of converting conservation reserve program grassland to row crops under no‐till vs. conventional tillage
Author(s) -
Ruan Leilei,
Philip Robertson G.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/gcb.12216
Subject(s) - tillage , conservation reserve program , nitrous oxide , environmental science , carbon dioxide , conventional tillage , agronomy , grassland , zoology , methane , biology , ecology , agriculture
Around 4.4 million ha of land in USDA Conservation Reserve Program ( CRP ) contracts will expire between 2013 and 2018 and some will likely return to crop production. No‐till ( NT ) management offers the potential to reduce the global warming costs of CO 2 , CH 4 , and N 2 O emissions during CRP conversion, but to date there have been no CRP conversion tillage comparisons. In 2009, we converted portions of three 9–21 ha CRP fields in Michigan to conventional tillage ( CT ) or NT soybean production and reserved a fourth field for reference. Both CO 2 and N 2 O fluxes increased following herbicide application in all converted fields, but in the CT treatment substantial and immediate N 2 O and CO 2 fluxes occurred after tillage. For the initial 201‐day conversion period, average daily N 2 O fluxes (g N 2 O‐N ha −1 d −1 ) were significantly different in the order: CT (47.5 ± 6.31, n = 6) ≫ NT (16.7 ± 2.45, n = 6) ≫ reference (2.51 ± 0.73, n = 4). Similarly, soil CO 2 fluxes in CT were 1.2 times those in NT and 3.1 times those in the unconverted CRP reference field. All treatments were minor sinks for CH 4 (−0.69 ± 0.42 to −1.86 ± 0.37 g CH 4 –C ha −1 d −1 ) with no significant differences among treatments. The positive global warming impact ( GWI ) of converted soybean fields under both CT (11.5 Mg CO 2 e ha −1 ) and NT (2.87 Mg CO 2 e ha −1 ) was in contrast to the negative GWI of the unconverted reference field (−3.5 Mg CO 2 e ha −1 ) with on‐going greenhouse gas ( GHG ) mitigation. N 2 O contributed 39.3% and 55.0% of the GWI under CT and NT systems with the remainder contributed by CO 2 (60.7% and 45.0%, respectively). Including foregone mitigation, we conclude that NT management can reduce GHG costs by ~60% compared to CT during initial CRP conversion.