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Mitigating methane emissions from irrigated paddy fields by application of aerobically composted livestock manures in eastern China
Author(s) -
Chen Ruirui,
Lin Xiangui,
Wang Yiming,
Hu Junli
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
soil use and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.709
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1475-2743
pISSN - 0266-0032
DOI - 10.1111/j.1475-2743.2010.00316.x
Subject(s) - manure , environmental science , agronomy , paddy field , livestock , compost , methane , chemistry , biology , ecology , organic chemistry
Livestock manure heaps and wetland rice fields are major sources of CH 4 emissions. A field experiment with an associated composting study were undertaken to investigate CH 4 emissions during manure composting and subsequent land application on paddy. Over a 24‐day period in the composting experiment, CH 4 emissions from stored manure was 17 times higher than that from composting manure, indicating that composting as an aerobic process was effective in mitigating CH 4 emissions compared with manure storage, which is normally under an anaerobic environment. Stored and composted manures were subsequently applied as organic fertilizers in the field experiment. Compared with the non‐fertilized control treatment, stored and composted manures increased grain yields by 30% and 21%, respectively. During the full rice‐growing season, the cumulative CH 4 emission was 15.8 g CH 4 /m 2 with the application of composted manure, only one‐third of that from stored manure. CH 4 emission per unit of grain yield was significantly decreased by composted manure, with a reduction of 56% from the control and 73% from stored manure. The results indicate that composted livestock manure in rice cultivation is a triple‐win option through sustaining rice yield, mitigating CH 4 emissions and re‐utilizing livestock waste.