| Literature DB >> 27600144 |
Hideaki Shibata1, James N Galloway2, Allison M Leach3, Lia R Cattaneo2, Laura Cattell Noll2, Jan Willem Erisman4,5, Baojing Gu6, Xia Liang7, Kentaro Hayashi8, Lin Ma9, Tommy Dalgaard10, Morten Graversgaard10, Deli Chen7, Keisuke Nansai11, Junko Shindo12, Kazuyo Matsubae13, Azusa Oita14, Ming-Chien Su15, Shin-Ichiro Mishima8, Albert Bleeker16.
Abstract
Nitrogen (N) management presents a sustainability dilemma: N is strongly linked to energy and food production, but excess reactive N causes environmental pollution. The N footprint is an indicator that quantifies reactive N losses to the environment from consumption and production of food and the use of energy. The average per capita N footprint (calculated using the N-Calculator methodology) of ten countries varies from 15 to 47 kg N capita-1 year-1. The major cause of the difference is the protein consumption rates and food production N losses. The food sector dominates all countries' N footprints. Global connections via trade significantly affect the N footprint in countries that rely on imported foods and feeds. The authors present N footprint reduction strategies (e.g., improve N use efficiency, increase N recycling, reduce food waste, shift dietary choices) and identify knowledge gaps (e.g., the N footprint from nonfood goods and soil N process).Entities:
Keywords: Nitrogen cycle; Nitrogen effects; Nitrogen footprint; Nitrogen use efficiency
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27600144 PMCID: PMC5274619 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-016-0815-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129