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Effects of Combined Use of Olive Mill Waste Compost and Sprinkler Irrigation on GHG Emissions and Net Ecosystem Carbon Budget under Different Tillage Systems.

Damián Fernández-RodríguezDavid Paulo FangueiroDavid Peña AbadesÁngel AlbarránJose Manuel Rato-NunesCarmen MartínJaime Terrón-SánchezLuis Andrés VicenteAntonio López-Piñeiro
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Traditional rice ( Oryza sativa L.) production by flooding is a source of greenhouse gases (GHG), especially methane. The high consumption of water, as well as the chemical and physical degradation caused by these traditional practices in rice soils, is promoting a decrease in rice production in the Mediterranean area. The aim of this study was to monitor GHG emissions and the net ecosystem carbon balance (NECB) from rice produced with sprinkler irrigation techniques and also assess the impact of olive mill waste compost (C-OW) application and tillage on GHG emissions and the NECB. A field experiment for irrigated rice production was implemented by considering four different treatments: (1) tillage (T); (2) no tillage-direct seeding techniques (DS); (3) application of C-OW followed by tillage (TC); and (4) application of C-OW followed by direct seeding (DSC). The C-OW was only applied in the first year at a dose of 80 Mg ha -1 . GHG emissions were monitored over three years in these four treatments in order to estimate the direct (first year) and residual (third year) effects of such practices. The application of C-OW caused an increase of 1.85 times the emission of CO 2 -C in the TC-DSC compared to the T-DS in the first year. It is noteworthy that the TC treatment was the only one that maintained an emission of CO 2 -C that was 42% higher than T in the third year. Regardless of the treatments and year of the study, negative values for the cumulative CH 4 were found, suggesting that under sprinkler irrigation, CH 4 oxidation was the dominant process. A decrease in N 2 O emissions was observed under direct seeding relative to the tillage treatments, although without significant differences. Tillage resulted in an increase in the global warming potential ( GWP ) of up to 31% with respect to direct seeding management in the third year, as a consequence of the greater carbon oxidation caused by intensive tillage. DS presented a positive NECB in the accumulation of C in the soil; therefore, it provided a greater ecological benefit to the environment. Thus, under Mediterranean conditions, rice production through a sprinkler irrigation system in combination with direct seeding techniques may be a sustainable alternative for rice crops, reducing their GWP and resulting in a lower carbon footprint. However, the use of C-OW as an organic amendment could increase the GHG emissions from rice fields irrigated by sprinklers, especially under tillage conditions.
Keyphrases
  • municipal solid waste
  • life cycle
  • sewage sludge
  • heavy metals
  • healthcare
  • climate change
  • human health
  • primary care
  • anaerobic digestion
  • physical activity
  • risk assessment
  • nitric oxide
  • room temperature
  • water quality