Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya

To improve the estimate of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) from tropical rangelands in sub-Saharan Africa, we measured GHG emissions from sheep excreta over two periods of 51 days on a Kenya rangeland. In addition, we measured GHG emissions from potential hotspots in the landscape linked to sheep grazing: overnight enclosures (“bomas”), where sheep are kept at night to protect them from theft and predators, the areas surrounding sheep bomas, and areas surrounding watering troughs. Results showed a short pulse of CO2 fluxes after sheep urine application and a rapid increase of CH4 fluxes following sheep dung application in both rainy and dry season. However, only small increases of N2O fluxes were observed after dung and urine applications compared to controls without excreta. Elevated N2O fluxes mainly coincided with heavy rainfall. Overall, N2O emission factors (EFs) did not vary across excreta type or seasons, but mean N2O EFs for dung (0.01%) and urine patches (0.02%) were only one tenth of the default EFs from the 2019 IPCC Refinement for dry climate. We did, however, find that bomas and watering troughs are sites of herd concentration that are important sources of GHG emissions in the landscape, and that emissions in these locations can remain elevated for months to years, especially when soil moisture is high. This study contributes to more robust estimates of GHG emissions from African livestock systems, which are fundamental to develop targeted mitigation strategies.

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Main Authors: Zhu, Yuhao, Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus, Merbold, Lutz, Oduor, Collins, Gakige, Jesse K., Mwangi, Paul, Leitner, Sonja
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-01
Subjects:nitrous oxide, livestock manure, urine, greenhouse gas emissions, pastures, sheep,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131885
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2023.108724
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1318852023-12-08T19:36:04Z Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya Zhu, Yuhao Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus Merbold, Lutz Oduor, Collins Gakige, Jesse K. Mwangi, Paul Leitner, Sonja nitrous oxide livestock manure urine greenhouse gas emissions pastures sheep To improve the estimate of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) from tropical rangelands in sub-Saharan Africa, we measured GHG emissions from sheep excreta over two periods of 51 days on a Kenya rangeland. In addition, we measured GHG emissions from potential hotspots in the landscape linked to sheep grazing: overnight enclosures (“bomas”), where sheep are kept at night to protect them from theft and predators, the areas surrounding sheep bomas, and areas surrounding watering troughs. Results showed a short pulse of CO2 fluxes after sheep urine application and a rapid increase of CH4 fluxes following sheep dung application in both rainy and dry season. However, only small increases of N2O fluxes were observed after dung and urine applications compared to controls without excreta. Elevated N2O fluxes mainly coincided with heavy rainfall. Overall, N2O emission factors (EFs) did not vary across excreta type or seasons, but mean N2O EFs for dung (0.01%) and urine patches (0.02%) were only one tenth of the default EFs from the 2019 IPCC Refinement for dry climate. We did, however, find that bomas and watering troughs are sites of herd concentration that are important sources of GHG emissions in the landscape, and that emissions in these locations can remain elevated for months to years, especially when soil moisture is high. This study contributes to more robust estimates of GHG emissions from African livestock systems, which are fundamental to develop targeted mitigation strategies. 2024-01 2023-09-18T08:04:39Z 2023-09-18T08:04:39Z Journal Article Zhu, Y., Butterbach-Bahl, K., Merbold, L., Oduor, C.O., Gakige, J.K., Mwangi, P. and Leitner, S.M. 2023. Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 359:108724. 1873-2305 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131885 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2023.108724 en CC-BY-NC-4.0 Open Access Elsevier Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic nitrous oxide
livestock manure
urine
greenhouse gas emissions
pastures
sheep
nitrous oxide
livestock manure
urine
greenhouse gas emissions
pastures
sheep
spellingShingle nitrous oxide
livestock manure
urine
greenhouse gas emissions
pastures
sheep
nitrous oxide
livestock manure
urine
greenhouse gas emissions
pastures
sheep
Zhu, Yuhao
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Merbold, Lutz
Oduor, Collins
Gakige, Jesse K.
Mwangi, Paul
Leitner, Sonja
Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya
description To improve the estimate of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) from tropical rangelands in sub-Saharan Africa, we measured GHG emissions from sheep excreta over two periods of 51 days on a Kenya rangeland. In addition, we measured GHG emissions from potential hotspots in the landscape linked to sheep grazing: overnight enclosures (“bomas”), where sheep are kept at night to protect them from theft and predators, the areas surrounding sheep bomas, and areas surrounding watering troughs. Results showed a short pulse of CO2 fluxes after sheep urine application and a rapid increase of CH4 fluxes following sheep dung application in both rainy and dry season. However, only small increases of N2O fluxes were observed after dung and urine applications compared to controls without excreta. Elevated N2O fluxes mainly coincided with heavy rainfall. Overall, N2O emission factors (EFs) did not vary across excreta type or seasons, but mean N2O EFs for dung (0.01%) and urine patches (0.02%) were only one tenth of the default EFs from the 2019 IPCC Refinement for dry climate. We did, however, find that bomas and watering troughs are sites of herd concentration that are important sources of GHG emissions in the landscape, and that emissions in these locations can remain elevated for months to years, especially when soil moisture is high. This study contributes to more robust estimates of GHG emissions from African livestock systems, which are fundamental to develop targeted mitigation strategies.
format Journal Article
topic_facet nitrous oxide
livestock manure
urine
greenhouse gas emissions
pastures
sheep
author Zhu, Yuhao
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Merbold, Lutz
Oduor, Collins
Gakige, Jesse K.
Mwangi, Paul
Leitner, Sonja
author_facet Zhu, Yuhao
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Merbold, Lutz
Oduor, Collins
Gakige, Jesse K.
Mwangi, Paul
Leitner, Sonja
author_sort Zhu, Yuhao
title Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya
title_short Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya
title_full Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya
title_fullStr Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in Kenya
title_sort greenhouse gas emissions from sheep excreta deposited onto tropical pastures in kenya
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2024-01
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131885
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2023.108724
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