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  5. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Crop Yields From Winter Oilseed Rape Cropping Systems are Unaffected by Management Practices
 
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Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Crop Yields From Winter Oilseed Rape Cropping Systems are Unaffected by Management Practices

Author(s)
O'Neill, M.  
Lanigan, Gary  
Forristal, Patrick Dermot  
Osborne, Bruce A.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/24706
Date Issued
2021-09-15
Date Available
2023-08-23T13:49:55Z
Abstract
Winter oilseed rape is traditionally established via plough-based soil cultivation and conventional sowing methods. Whilst there is potential to adopt lower cost, and less intensive establishment systems, the impact of these on greenhouse gas emissions have not been evaluated. To address this, field experiments were conducted in 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 to investigate the effects of 1) crop establishment method and 2) sowing method on soil greenhouse gas emissions from a winter oilseed rape crop grown in Ireland. Soil carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide and methane emission measurements were carried out using the static chamber method. Yield (t seed ha−1) and the yield-scaled global warming potential (kg CO2-eq. kg−1 seed) were also determined for each management practice. During crop establishment, conventional tillage induced an initially rapid loss of carbon dioxide (2.34 g C m−2 hr−1) compared to strip tillage (0.94 g C m−2 hr−1) or minimum tillage (0.16 g C m−2 hr−1) (p < 0.05), although this decreased to background values within a few hours. In the crop establishment trial, the cumulative greenhouse gas emissions were, apart from methane, unaffected by tillage management when sown at a conventional (125 mm) or wide (600 mm) row spacing. In the sowing method trial, cumulative carbon dioxide emissions were also 21% higher when plants were sown at 10 seeds m−2 compared to 60 seeds m−2 (p < 0.05). Row spacing width (125 and 750 mm) and variety (conventional and semi-dwarf) were found to have little effect on greenhouse gas emissions and differences in seed yield between the sowing treatments were small. Overall, management practices had no consistent effect on soil greenhouse gas emissions and modifications in seed yield per plant countered differences in planting density.
Sponsorship
Teagasc
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Journal
Frontiers in Environmental Science
Volume
9
Copyright (Published Version)
2021 the Authors
Subjects

Crop management

Tillage

Row spacing

Variety

GHG

Seed rate

Greenhouse gases

Oilseed rape

DOI
10.3389/fenvs.2021.716636
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
File(s)
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fenvs-09-716636.pdf

Size

2.76 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

19ed9481bb694bf6094dee8ec43dffb2

Owning collection
Biology & Environmental Science Research Collection
Mapped collections
Earth Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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