| Literature DB >> 27185532 |
James S Gerber1, Kimberly M Carlson1,2, David Makowski3, Nathaniel D Mueller4,5, Iñaki Garcia de Cortazar-Atauri6, Petr Havlík7, Mario Herrero8, Marie Launay6, Christine S O'Connell1, Pete Smith9, Paul C West1.
Abstract
With increasing nitrogen (N) application to croplands required to support growing food demand, mitigating N2 O emissions from agricultural soils is a global challenge. National greenhouse gas emissions accounting typically estimates N2 O emissions at the country scale by aggregating all crops, under the assumption that N2 O emissions are linearly related to N application. However, field studies and meta-analyses indicate a nonlinear relationship, in which N2 O emissions are relatively greater at higher N application rates. Here, we apply a super-linear emissions response model to crop-specific, spatially explicit synthetic N fertilizer and manure N inputs to provide subnational accounting of global N2 O emissions from croplands. We estimate 0.66 Tg of N2 O-N direct global emissions circa 2000, with 50% of emissions concentrated in 13% of harvested area. Compared to estimates from the IPCC Tier 1 linear model, our updated N2 O emissions range from 20% to 40% lower throughout sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern Europe, to >120% greater in some Western European countries. At low N application rates, the weak nonlinear response of N2 O emissions suggests that relatively large increases in N fertilizer application would generate relatively small increases in N2 O emissions. As aggregated fertilizer data generate underestimation bias in nonlinear models, high-resolution N application data are critical to support accurate N2 O emissions estimates.Entities:
Keywords: N2O; climate change; emissions; flooded rice; greenhouse gas; manure; meta-analysis; nitrogen; nitrous oxide; sustainable agriculture
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27185532 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863