4.4 Article

Gained net ecosystem economic benefit in machine-transplanted double-cropped rice strategies

Journal

NUTRIENT CYCLING IN AGROECOSYSTEMS
Volume 124, Issue 1, Pages 1-15

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10705-022-10218-0

Keywords

Greenhouse gas emission; Carbon footprint; Paddy field; N application rate; Emission factor; Machine-transplanted rice

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Project-the Development and Application of Slow Controlled-release Fertilizer Coating with Polyether Polyurethane [2017YFD200703-3]
  2. National Technical System of Rice Industry [CARS-01-26]
  3. Hunan Innovation Fund of Agricultural Science and Technology [2019LS03-3]
  4. Hunan Youth Fund of Natural Science Foundation [2019JJ50337]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Machine-transplanted rice with side-deep fertilization (MRSF) can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase net ecosystem economic benefit, making it a beneficial approach for commercial rice cultivation.
Machine-transplanted rice with side-deep fertilization (MRSF) can partially compensate for the negative environmental impacts of traditional rice cultivation methods. However, its effects on net ecosystem economic benefit, greenhouse gas emissions, and carbon footprint have not been extensively assessed. We conducted a two-season field experiment to investigate the effects of MRSF in paddy fields on greenhouse gas emissions, global warming potential, carbon footprint, grain yield, and net ecosystem economic benefit. Six treatments with different N application rates (0/0, 90/99, 105/116, 120/132, 135/149, and 150/165 kg N ha(-1)) were applied to early season rice and late-season rice. The results indicated that under MRSF, soil CH4 and N2O emissions were significantly lower (by 13.2-45.6% and 5.4-28.7% in early season rice and 21.3-42.3% and 19.1-35.6% in late-season rice, respectively) than those under conventional fertilization. Chemical fertilizer was the largest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural inputs for the early season and late-season rice. Additionally, MRSF mitigated soil CH4 and N2O emissions and ultimately reduced the total greenhouse gas emissions. The net ecosystem economic benefit of MRSF was significantly higher (by 16.3-25.7% and 23.4-29.7% for the early season and late-season rice, respectively) than that under conventional fertilization. Overall, MRSF is an economically beneficial approach with low environmental impact for commercial rice cultivation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available