257-20 Can Nitrogen Fertilizer Applied to Corn Affect N2O Emissions the Following Year from a Corn-Soybean Rotation in the US Midwest?.

Poster Number 347

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Agricultural Practices to Improve Nitrogen-Use Efficiency and Mitigate Greenhouse Gas Emission: III (includes student competition)
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall ABC
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Javed Iqbal1, David Christopher Mitchell2, Daniel W. Barker2, Fernando Miguez2, John E. Sawyer2, Jose Pantoja2 and Michael J Castellano2, (1)Department of Agronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, IA
(2)Iowa State University, Department of Agronomy, Ames, IA
Agricultural management strategies are needed to reduce N2O emissions from croplands. However, most research has focused on corn due to large N fertilizer inputs that promote N2O emission. Corn is commonly rotated with other crops that receive little or no N fertilizer, yet little information exists on the potential for N fertilizer applications to corn to affect N2O emissions during subsequent crops. To determine how N fertilizer application to corn affects N2O emissions during the subsequent crop in rotation, we conducted a three year study (2011, 2012, and 2013) of N2O emissions from a corn-soybean rotation at Boone, Iowa with three N fertilizer rates applied to corn (0 kg N ha-1, a recommended rate of 135 kg N ha-1, and an excessive rate of 225 kg N ha-1). Soybean received no N fertilizer. We further investigated the potential for a winter cereal rye cover crop to affect N2O emissions from both crops. In both crops, cover crop effects on N2O emissions and NO3 concentrations were not consistent across years or N fertilizer treatments. Across all years and irrespective of cover crops, an increase in N fertilizer rate from the recommended to excessive rate resulted in a 16% increase in mean N2O emission rate from corn. In two of three years, mean N2O emission rates from the soybean crop were not affected by the N rate applied to the corn. However, in 2013 following the drought year 2012, mean N2O emission rates from the recommended and excessive rates were 35% and 70% greater than the zero N rate. These results suggest that cover crops do not consistently reduce N2O emissions in either the corn or soybean phase of the rotation, and climate patterns interact with N fertilizer rate to affect N2O emissions from crops that follow corn.
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Agricultural Practices to Improve Nitrogen-Use Efficiency and Mitigate Greenhouse Gas Emission: III (includes student competition)