Modeling global annual N2O and NO emissions from fertilized fields

Publication

In this paper, information from 846 N2O emission measurements in agricultural fields and 99 measurements for NO emissions was used to describe the influence of various factors regulating emissions from mineral soils in models for calculating global N2O and NO emissions.

Only those factors having a significant influence on N2O and NO emissions were included in the models.For N2O these were:

  1. environmental factors (climate, soil organic C content, soil texture, drainage and soil pH)
  2. management-related factors (N application rate per fertilizer type, type of crop, with major differences between grass, legumes and other annual crops)
  3. factors related to the measurements (length of measurement period and frequency of measurements)

The most important controls on NO emission include the N application rate per fertilizer type, soil organic-C content and soil drainage.Calculated global annual N2O-N and NO-N emissions from fertilized agricultural fields amount to 2.8 and 1.6 Mtonne, respectively. The global mean fertilizer-induced emissions for N2O and NO amount to 0.9% and 0.7%, respectively, of the N applied. These overall results account for the spatial variability of the main N2O and NO emission controls on the landscape scale.

More information

Authors

Bouwman AF , Boumans LJM , Batjes NH

Specifications

Publication title
Modeling global annual N2O and NO emissions from fertilized fields
Publication date
12 November 2002
Publication type
Publication
Magazine
Global Biogeochem Cycles 2002; 16:art.no.1080
Product number
90925