Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands

One of the main causes of the low efficiency in nitrogen (N) use by crops is the volatilization of ammonia (NH3) from fertilizers. Information taken from 1667 NH3 volatilization measurements documented in 148 research papers was summarized to assess the influence on NH3 volatilization of crop type, fertilizer type, and rate and mode of application and temperature, as well as soil organic carbon, texture, pH, CEC, measurement technique, and measurement location. The data set was summarized in three ways: (1) by calculating means for each of the factors mentioned, in which findings from each research paper were weighted equally; (2) by calculating weighted median values corrected for unbalanced features of the collected data; and (3) by developing a summary model using linear regression based on weighted median values for NH3 volatilization and by calculating global NH3 volatilization losses from fertilizer application using 0.5° resolution data on land use and soils. The calculated median NH3 loss from global application of synthetic N fertilizers (78 million tons N per year) and animal manure (33 million tons N per year) amount to 14% (10–19%) and 23% (19–29%), respectively. In developing countries, because of high temperatures and the widespread use of urea, ammonium sulfate, and ammonium bicarbonate, estimated NH3 volatilization loss from synthetic fertilizers amounts to 18%, and in industrialized countries it amounts to 7%. The estimated NH3 loss from animal manure is 21% in industrialized and 26% in developing countries.

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Main Authors: Bouwman, A.F., Boumans, L.J.M., Batjes, N.H.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:emission, flooded rice fields, grazed swards, inventory, management, nitrogen loss, soil properties, sulfate, systems, urea ammonium-nitrate,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/estimation-of-global-nh3-emissions-from-synthetic-fertilizers-and
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3390592025-01-23 Bouwman, A.F. Boumans, L.J.M. Batjes, N.H. Article/Letter to editor Global Biogeochemical Cycles 16 (2002) ISSN: 0886-6236 Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands 2002 One of the main causes of the low efficiency in nitrogen (N) use by crops is the volatilization of ammonia (NH3) from fertilizers. Information taken from 1667 NH3 volatilization measurements documented in 148 research papers was summarized to assess the influence on NH3 volatilization of crop type, fertilizer type, and rate and mode of application and temperature, as well as soil organic carbon, texture, pH, CEC, measurement technique, and measurement location. The data set was summarized in three ways: (1) by calculating means for each of the factors mentioned, in which findings from each research paper were weighted equally; (2) by calculating weighted median values corrected for unbalanced features of the collected data; and (3) by developing a summary model using linear regression based on weighted median values for NH3 volatilization and by calculating global NH3 volatilization losses from fertilizer application using 0.5° resolution data on land use and soils. The calculated median NH3 loss from global application of synthetic N fertilizers (78 million tons N per year) and animal manure (33 million tons N per year) amount to 14% (10–19%) and 23% (19–29%), respectively. In developing countries, because of high temperatures and the widespread use of urea, ammonium sulfate, and ammonium bicarbonate, estimated NH3 volatilization loss from synthetic fertilizers amounts to 18%, and in industrialized countries it amounts to 7%. The estimated NH3 loss from animal manure is 21% in industrialized and 26% in developing countries. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/estimation-of-global-nh3-emissions-from-synthetic-fertilizers-and 10.1029/2000GB001389 https://edepot.wur.nl/54002 emission flooded rice fields grazed swards inventory management nitrogen loss soil properties sulfate systems urea ammonium-nitrate Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic emission
flooded rice fields
grazed swards
inventory
management
nitrogen loss
soil properties
sulfate
systems
urea ammonium-nitrate
emission
flooded rice fields
grazed swards
inventory
management
nitrogen loss
soil properties
sulfate
systems
urea ammonium-nitrate
spellingShingle emission
flooded rice fields
grazed swards
inventory
management
nitrogen loss
soil properties
sulfate
systems
urea ammonium-nitrate
emission
flooded rice fields
grazed swards
inventory
management
nitrogen loss
soil properties
sulfate
systems
urea ammonium-nitrate
Bouwman, A.F.
Boumans, L.J.M.
Batjes, N.H.
Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
description One of the main causes of the low efficiency in nitrogen (N) use by crops is the volatilization of ammonia (NH3) from fertilizers. Information taken from 1667 NH3 volatilization measurements documented in 148 research papers was summarized to assess the influence on NH3 volatilization of crop type, fertilizer type, and rate and mode of application and temperature, as well as soil organic carbon, texture, pH, CEC, measurement technique, and measurement location. The data set was summarized in three ways: (1) by calculating means for each of the factors mentioned, in which findings from each research paper were weighted equally; (2) by calculating weighted median values corrected for unbalanced features of the collected data; and (3) by developing a summary model using linear regression based on weighted median values for NH3 volatilization and by calculating global NH3 volatilization losses from fertilizer application using 0.5° resolution data on land use and soils. The calculated median NH3 loss from global application of synthetic N fertilizers (78 million tons N per year) and animal manure (33 million tons N per year) amount to 14% (10–19%) and 23% (19–29%), respectively. In developing countries, because of high temperatures and the widespread use of urea, ammonium sulfate, and ammonium bicarbonate, estimated NH3 volatilization loss from synthetic fertilizers amounts to 18%, and in industrialized countries it amounts to 7%. The estimated NH3 loss from animal manure is 21% in industrialized and 26% in developing countries.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet emission
flooded rice fields
grazed swards
inventory
management
nitrogen loss
soil properties
sulfate
systems
urea ammonium-nitrate
author Bouwman, A.F.
Boumans, L.J.M.
Batjes, N.H.
author_facet Bouwman, A.F.
Boumans, L.J.M.
Batjes, N.H.
author_sort Bouwman, A.F.
title Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
title_short Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
title_full Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
title_fullStr Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of global NH3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
title_sort estimation of global nh3 emissions from synthetic fertilizers and animal manure applied to arable lands and grasslands
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/estimation-of-global-nh3-emissions-from-synthetic-fertilizers-and
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AT batjesnh estimationofglobalnh3emissionsfromsyntheticfertilizersandanimalmanureappliedtoarablelandsandgrasslands
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