e NEWS
Studying Fertilizers to
Cut Greenhouse
Gases
Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) scientists
have found that using alternative types of fertilizers
can cut back on greenhouse gas emissions, at least in
one part of the country. They are currently examining
whether the alternatives offer similar benefits
nationwide.
Nitrogen
fertilizers are often a necessity for ensuring
sufficient crop yields, but their use leads to release
of nitrous oxide, a major greenhouse gas, into the
atmosphere. Fertilizer use is one reason an estimated
78 percent of the nation's nitrous oxide emissions
come from agriculture, according to
Ardell Halvorson, a
soil scientist at the ARS
Soil Plant Nutrient
Research Laboratory
in Fort Collins, Colo.
Halvorson compared
nitrous oxide emissions from corn fields treated with
either a conventional nitrogen fertilizer (urea) or
either of two specially formulated urea
fertilizers—one with "controlled release"
polymer-coated pellets, and the other with inhibitors
added to "stabilize" the urea to keep more of it in
the soil as ammonium for a longer period.
In a two-year
experiment at Fort Collins, he collected the emissions
using static vented chambers, similar to small
"pillbox" structures placed over the soil. He chose a
no-till cropping system because it's known to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions. He found that the
controlled-release fertilizer cut nitrous oxide
emissions by a third, and that the stabilized
fertilizer cut them almost in half.
Halvorson's results are
so far limited to the irrigated fields and cool,
semi-arid conditions in and around Fort Collins. But
nitrous oxide releases are the result of a complex
interplay of conditions that vary from one area to the
next, such as soil water content, soil temperatures,
soil types, microbial activity, climactic conditions
and rainfall patterns. So Halvorson is expanding the
study, with support from the fertilizer industry and
cooperation of other ARS locations, to see how the
fertilizers respond at seven sites around the United
States.
By
Dennis O'Brien in Agricultural Research Magazine
Nov/Dec 2009
more in:
"New
Leads on Nitrous Oxide" was published in the
November/December 2009
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.