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Carbon budgets of potential tropical perennial grass cropping scenarios for bioenergy feedstock production. | LitMetric

Carbon budgets of potential tropical perennial grass cropping scenarios for bioenergy feedstock production.

Carbon Balance Manag

Dept. of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1910 East-West Rd., Honolulu, HI, 96822, USA.

Published: September 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to establish a carbon budget for conventional sugarcane farming in Maui and compare it with three energy cropping scenarios involving different irrigation practices and crop types.
  • Results revealed that emissions from pre-harvest burns were significantly higher in conventional sugarcane, while napiergrass demonstrated increased soil carbon storage, making it a more sustainable option.
  • The findings suggest that transitioning to ratoon-harvested crops like napiergrass could reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance sustainability in former sugarcane lands.

Article Abstract

Background: The environmental costs of fossil fuel consumption are globally recognized, opening many pathways for the development of regional portfolio solutions for sustainable replacement fuel and energy options. The purpose of this study was to create a baseline carbon (C) budget of a conventionally managed sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum) production system on Maui, Hawaii, and compare it to three different future energy cropping scenarios: (1) conventional sugarcane with a 50% deficit irrigation (sugarcane 50%), (2) ratoon harvested napiergrass (Pennisetum purpureum Schumach.) with 100% irrigation (napier 100%), and (3) ratoon harvested napiergrass with a 50% deficit irrigation (napier 50%).

Results: The differences among cropping scenarios for the fossil fuel-based emissions associated with agricultural inputs and field operations were small compared to the differences associated with pre-harvest burn emissions and soil C stock under ratoon harvest and zero-tillage management. Burn emissions were nearly 2000 kg C ha year in the conventional sugarcane; whereas soil C gains were approximately 4500 kg C ha year in the surface layer of the soil profile for napiergrass. Further, gains in deep soil profile C were nearly three times greater than in the surface layer. Therefore, net global warming potential was greatest for conventional sugarcane and least for napier 50% when deep profile soil C was included. Per unit of biomass yield, the most greenhouse gas (GHG) intensive scenario was sugarcane 50% with a GHG Index (GHGI, positive values imply a climate impact, so a more negative value is preferable for climate change mitigation) of 0.11 and the least intensive was napiergrass 50% when a deep soil profile was included (GHGI = - 0.77).

Conclusion: Future scenarios for energy or fuel production on former sugarcane land across the Pacific Basin or other volcanic islands should concentrate on ratoon-harvested crops that maintain yields under zero-tillage management for long intervals between kill harvest and reduce costs of field operations and agricultural input requirements. For napiergrass on Maui and elsewhere, deficit irrigation maximized climate change mitigation of the system and reduced water use should be part of planning a sustainable, diversified agricultural landscape.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6153195PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13021-018-0102-8DOI Listing

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