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      Review and analysis of global agricultural N₂O emissions relevant to the UK.

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          Abstract

          As part of a UK government funded research project to update the UK N2O inventory methodology, a systematic review of published nitrous oxide (N2O) emission factors was carried out of non-UK research, for future comparison and synthesis with the UK measurement based evidence base. The aim of the study is to assess how the UK IPCC default emission factor for N2O emissions derived from synthetic or organic fertiliser inputs (EF1) compares to international values reported in published literature. The availability of data for comparing and/or refining the UK IPCC default value and the possibility of analysing sufficient auxiliary data to propose a Tier 2 EF1 reporting strategy is evaluated. The review demonstrated a lack of consistency in reporting error bounds for fertiliser-derived EFs and N2O flux data with 8% and 44% of publications reporting EF and N2O flux error bounds respectively. There was also poor description of environmental (climate and soil) and experimental design auxiliary data. This is likely to be due to differences in study objectives, however potential improvements to soil parameter reporting are proposed. The review demonstrates that emission factors for agricultural-derived N2O emissions ranged -0.34% to 37% showing high variation compared to the UK Tier 1 IPCC EF1 default values of 1.25% (IPCC 1996) and 1% (IPPC 2006). However, the majority (83%) of EFs reported for UK-relevant soils fell within the UK IPCC EF1 uncertainty range of 0.03% to 3%. Residual maximum likelihood (REML) analysis of the data collated in the review showed that the type and rate of fertiliser N applied and soil type were significant factors influencing EFs reported. Country of emission, the length of the measurement period, the number of splits, the crop type, pH and SOC did not have a significant impact on N2O emissions. A subset of publications where sufficient data was reported for meta-analysis to be conducted was identified. Meta-analysis of effect sizes of 41 treatments demonstrated that the application of fertiliser has a significant effect on N2O emissions in comparison to control plots and that emission factors were significantly different to zero. However no significant relationships between the quantity of fertiliser applied and the effect size of the amount of N2O emitted from fertilised plots compared to control plots were found. Annual addition of fertiliser of 35 to 557 kg N/ha gave a mean increase in emissions of 2.02 ± 0.28 g N2O/ha/day compared to control treatments (p<0.01). Emission factors were significantly different from zero, with a mean emission factor estimated directly from the meta analysis of 0.17 ± 0.02%. This is lower than the IPCC 2006 Tier 1 EF1 value of 1% but falling within the uncertainty bound for the IPCC 2006 Tier 1 EF1 (0.03% to 3%). As only a small number of papers were viable for meta analysis to be conducted due to lack of reporting of the key controlling factors, the estimates of EF in this paper cannot include the true variability under conditions similar to the UK. Review-derived EFs of 0.34% to 37% and mean EF from meta-analysis of 0.17 ± 0.02% highlight variability in reporting EFs depending on the method applied and sample size. A protocol of systematic reporting of N2O emissions and key auxiliary parameters in publications across disciplines is proposed. If adopted this would strengthen the community to inform IPCC Tier 2 reporting development and reduce the uncertainty surrounding reported UK N2O emissions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Sci. Total Environ.
          The Science of the total environment
          1879-1026
          0048-9697
          Jul 15 2014
          : 487
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Scotland's Rural College, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, United Kingdom. Electronic address: Sarah.buckingham@sruc.ac.uk.
          [2 ] ADAS, Wobaston Road, Wolverhampton WV9 5AP, United Kingdom.
          [3 ] Cranfield University, Cranfield MK43 0AL, United Kingdom.
          [4 ] North Wyke, Rothamsted Research, Okehampton, Devon EX20 2SB, United Kingdom.
          [5 ] Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute, Newforge Lane, Belfast BT9 5PX, United Kingdom.
          [6 ] Scotland's Rural College, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, United Kingdom.
          Article
          S0048-9697(14)00312-X
          10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.02.122
          24784741
          99fabe0b-8e02-4ba4-9381-cac1764de746
          Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
          History

          Agricultural soils,Emission factors,Nitrous oxide emissions

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