Agricultural practices contribute considerably to emissions of greenhouse gases. So far, knowledge on the impact of organic compared to non-organic farming on soil-derived nitrous oxide (NO) and methane (CH) emissions is limited. We investigated NO and CH fluxes with manual chambers during 571 days in a grass-clover- silage maize - green manure cropping sequence in the long-term field trial "DOK" in Switzerland. We compared two organic farming systems - biodynamic (BIODYN) and bioorganic (BIOORG) - with two non-organic systems - solely mineral fertilisation (CONMIN) and mixed farming including farmyard manure (CONFYM) - all reflecting Swiss farming practices-together with an unfertilised control (NOFERT). We observed a 40.2% reduction of NO emissions per hectare for organic compared to non-organic systems. In contrast to current knowledge, yield-scaled cumulated NO emissions under silage maize were similar between organic and non-organic systems. Cumulated on area scale we recorded under silage maize a modest CH uptake for BIODYN and CONMIN and high CH emissions for CONFYM. We found that, in addition to N input, quality properties such as pH, soil organic carbon and microbial biomass significantly affected NO emissions. This study showed that organic farming systems can be a viable measure contributing to greenhouse gas mitigation in the agricultural sector.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6368562 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-38207-w | DOI Listing |
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