Ammonia emissions from nitrogen fertilised agricultural soils: controlling factors and solutions for emission reduction

被引:3
|
作者
Rathbone, Catrin [1 ,2 ]
Ullah, Sami [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Birmingham, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Birmingham, England
[2] Univ Birmingham, Birmingham Inst Forest Res, Birmingham, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
agriculture; ammonia; inorganic nitrogen fertilisers; Ireland; NH3; losses; nitrification inhibitors; Soil; UK; urea; urease inhibitors; WINTER-WHEAT; VOLATILIZATION; UREA; MITIGATION; DEPOSITION;
D O I
10.1071/EN23010
中图分类号
O65 [分析化学];
学科分类号
070302 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Rationale. Ammonia (NH3) emissions from inorganic nitrogen (N) fertilisers applied to agricultural soils have negative implications for environmental quality and human health. Despite this, efforts to reduce NH3 emissions in the UK have achieved limited success. This study aims to provide an overview of NH3 emissions from UK and Ireland agricultural soils receiving N fertilisers, their regulating factors and the potential role of inhibitors in reducing current NH3 losses. Methodology. A systematic literature search was performed to identify relevant experimental data and studies, and the extracted data (total of 298 field fertilisation events) were categorised and analysed systematically.Results NH3 emissions ranged from -4.00 to 77.00% of applied fertiliser-N lost as NH3. In addition to fertiliser type, NH3 losses were also significantly affected by land-use type and soil pH. Urease and combined urease and nitrification inhibitors significantly reduced emissions by 74.50 and 70.00% compared to uninhibited-urea respectively. Discussion. In addition to fertiliser types, land-use and soil pH were found as factors for consideration as modifiers to the maximum NH3 emission factor (EFmax) values currently used in the UK, in order to improve estimations of NH3 emissions, particularly from non-urea fertilisers. This is imperative as NH3 losses exceeded current EFmax limits, particularly in the case of non-urea fertilisers, by similar to 34%, implying that NH3 emissions estimated from UK synthetic fertiliser require further refinements. NH3 losses are not completely inhibited, inhibitors cannot be solely relied upon for tackling NH3 emissions from UK and Ireland fertiliser usage and further research is needed into alternative mitigation methods to further reduce NH3 losses.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Nitrous oxide emissions from fertilised UK arable soils: Fluxes, emission factors and mitigation
    Bell, M. J.
    Hinton, N.
    Cloy, J. M.
    Topp, C. F. E.
    Rees, R. M.
    Cardenas, L.
    Scott, T.
    Webster, C.
    Ashton, R. W.
    Whitmore, A. P.
    Williams, J. R.
    Balshaw, H.
    Paine, F.
    Goulding, K. W. T.
    Chadwick, D. R.
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 212 : 134 - 147
  • [2] Application of metal oxide semiconductor for detection of ammonia emissions from agricultural sources
    Molleman, Bastiaan
    Alessi, Enrico
    Krol, Dominika
    Morton, Phoebe A.
    Daly, Karen
    SENSING AND BIO-SENSING RESEARCH, 2022, 38
  • [3] Global soil-derived ammonia emissions from agricultural nitrogen fertilizer application: A refinement based on regional and crop-specific emission factors
    Ma, Ruoya
    Zou, Jianwen
    Han, Zhaoqiang
    Yu, Kai
    Wu, Shuang
    Li, Zhaofu
    Liu, Shuwei
    Niu, Shuli
    Horwath, William R.
    Zhu-Barker, Xia
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2021, 27 (04) : 855 - 867
  • [4] Ammonia emission factors from cattle production systems in Ireland - a review
    Owusu-Twum, M. Y.
    Kelleghan, D.
    Gleasure, G.
    Forrestal, P.
    Lanigan, G. J.
    Richards, K. G.
    Krol, D. J.
    IRISH JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD RESEARCH, 2023, 62 (01) : 75 - 95
  • [5] Effect of nitrogen fertilization and residue management practices on ammonia emissions from subtropical sugarcane production
    Dattamudi, Sanku
    Wang, Jim J.
    Dodla, Syam Kumar
    Arceneaux, Allen
    Viator, H. P.
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 139 : 122 - 130
  • [6] Emissions of nitrous oxide, nitrogen oxides and ammonia from a maize field in the North China Plain
    Zhang, Yuanyuan
    Liu, Junfeng
    Mu, Yujing
    Pei, Shuwei
    Lun, Xiaoxiu
    Chai, Fahe
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2011, 45 (17) : 2956 - 2961
  • [7] Weekly agricultural emissions and ambient concentrations of ammonia: Validation of an emission inventory
    Bittman, Shabtai
    Jones, Keith
    Vingarzan, Roxanne
    Hunt, Derek E.
    Sheppard, Steve C.
    Tait, John
    So, Rita
    Zhao, Johanna
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 113 : 108 - 117
  • [8] Estimate of changes in agricultural terrestrial nitrogen pathways and ammonia emissions from 1850 to present in the Community Earth System Model
    Riddick, Stuart
    Ward, Daniel
    Hess, Peter
    Mahowald, Natalie
    Massad, Raia
    Holland, Elisabeth
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2016, 13 (11) : 3397 - 3426
  • [9] Highly efficient reduction of ammonia emissions from livestock waste by the synergy of novel manure acidification and inhibition of ureolytic bacteria
    Liu, Jun
    Li, Xia
    Xu, Yanliang
    Wu, Yutian
    Wang, Ruili
    Zhang, Xiujuan
    Hou, Yaguang
    Qu, Haoli
    Wang, Li
    He, Mingxiong
    Kupczok, Anne
    He, Jing
    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2023, 172
  • [10] Modeling of ammonia emissions from soils
    Roelle, PA
    Aneja, VP
    ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 2005, 22 (01) : 58 - 72