Common practices for manual greenhouse gas sampling in rice production: a literature study on sampling modalities of the closed chamber method

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bjoern Ole Sander ◽  
Reiner Wassmann
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reena Macagga ◽  
Shrijana Vaidya ◽  
Danica Antonijevic ◽  
Marten Schmidt ◽  
Matthias Lueck ◽  
...  

<p>The Philippines is one of the world’s leading producers of pineapples, wherein production is comprised mostly of small family farms that are less than 2 hectares in size. As by-product, they generate a large amount of plant residues (e.g., crowns and stems) that are commonly left at the edge of the field. This practice releases substantial amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and neglects the potential value of pineapple residue. Enabling a waste treatment by returning them to the field through incorporation or mulching holds the potential to maintain soil fertility, reduce climate impact, secure yield stability, and achieving a high resource efficiency by closing material cycles locally. It may also increase soil organic carbon stock (SOC) and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. To date, however, the knowledge about this is still very sparse.</p><p>The rePRISING project aims to demonstrate that returning pineapple residue either through mulching or incorporation to the field may help promote the closing of nutrient-cycles (C/N/P/K) locally, thus helping to increase soil fertility and soil C sequestration, while reducing GHG emissions.<strong> </strong>Within the project, the recycling of pineapple residue together with various local organic and inorganic amendments will be studied during a two-year field experiment using the manual closed chamber method. The field study will be supplemented by pot-scale greenhouse and incubation experiments, used inter alia to determine baseline GHG emissions and carbon budgets of pineapple cultivation systems and residue treatments.</p><p>Here we present first results of a pot experiment performed during winter 2020-2021 used to develop a suitable procedure for the in-situ determination of dynamic net ecosystem C balances (NECB) for pineapple cultivation systems. This will be further utilized for upcoming field study. This is challenging in so far as pineapple plants use the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM photosynthesis) and the manual closed chamber method has not yet been applied to determine NECB from CAM plants.</p><p><strong>Keywords: </strong>nutrient-cycling, carbon sequestration, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, pineapple residue, climate change mitigation</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Călin VAC ◽  
Gabriela Emilia POPIŢA ◽  
Nicolae FRUNZETI ◽  
Antoanela POPOVICI

Animal manure is an important source of anthropogenic GHG (greenhouse gas): methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2). The livestock contributes with 37% of global CH4 emission. The sources of GHG (CO2 and CH4) are the liquid manure or slurry storage and the compact solid manure. Measurement systems of GHG emission are important for the selection of the appropriate technology. By using the closed chamber method for soil, landfills, volcanoes etc., the present study evaluates the estimation of total emissions of methane and carbon dioxide from an experimental farm in Cluj County, Romania. The investigated area covered with sheep solid manure was about 579 m2 and ~5 cm thick, for cattle was about 12 m2 and 5 m thick and for swine was about 1.5 m5 and 0.5 m thick. The total methane emission measured for sheep manure was 0.83 t CH4/year and for cattle manure was 0.185 t CH4/year. The total carbon dioxide emission measured for sheep manure was 61.3 t CO2/year and for cattle manure was 4.7 t CO2/year. The measurement for pigs manure was high and this could be due to the freshness of the manure. The estimated emissions showed that a considerable amount of CH4 and CO2 is produced also by an experimental farm and an appropriate management of manure is important for reducing greenhouse gas. In this respect, we believe that the future solution for a green economy is to use manure in biogas plants.


Author(s):  
Fuliang Jiang ◽  
Xiaoli Wang ◽  
Shuai Zhang ◽  
Xiangyang Li ◽  
Changshou Hong

The closed chamber method is widely used in measuring radon exhalation rate, which can avoid the error caused by the leakage and anti-diffusion phenomena. Firstly, considering the actual situation that uranium ore is difficult to obtain and have a high radioactivity, the uranium-like rock was made according to the similarity theory. Secondly, the diffusion length and intrinsic radon exhalation rate were obtained by using the closed chamber method. Thirdly, the theoretical values of radon exhalation rate made by uranium-like ore block were calculated, compared with the measured values. This study shows that the uranium-like rock block made by the best mass ratio is helpful for the subsequent experiment, and the error between the theoretical calculation and the measured value is no more than 9.14%. This indicates it is reliable to estimate radon exhalation rate by diffusion length and intrinsic radon exhalation rate and can also provide a foundation for rapidly gaining radon exhalation rate of the same type material by the closed chamber method. This study can further promote the study of the radon exhalation rate under the complex physical conditions and then better guide the protection work of radon radiation in underground mining.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinhard Well ◽  
Dominika Lewicka-Szczebak ◽  
Martin Maier ◽  
Amanda Matson

<p>Common field methods for measuring soil denitrification in situ include monitoring the accumulation of <sup>15</sup>N labelled N<sub>2</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O evolved from <sup>15</sup>N labelled soil nitrate pool in soil surface chambers. Bias of denitrification rates derived from chamber measurements results from subsoil diffusion of <sup>15</sup>N labelled denitrification products, but this can be corrected by diffusion modeling (Well et al., 2019). Moreover, precision of the conventional <sup>15</sup>N gas flux method is low due to the high N<sub>2</sub> background of the atmosphere. An alternative to the closed chamber method is to use concentration gradients of soil gas to quantify their fluxes (Maier &  Schack-Kirchner, 2014). Advantages compared to the closed  chamber method include the facts that (i) time consuming work with closed chambers is replaced by easier sampling of soil gas probes, (ii) depth profiles yield not only the surface flux but also information on the depth distribution of gas production and (iii) soil gas concentrations are higher than chamber gas concentration, resulting in better detectability of <sup>15</sup>N-labelled denitrification products. Here we use this approach for the first time to evaluate denitrification rates derived from depth profiles of <sup>15</sup>N labelled N<sub>2</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O in the field by closed chamber measurements published previously (Lewicka-Szczebak et al., 2020).</p><p>We compared surface fluxes of N<sub>2</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O from <sup>15</sup>N labelled microplots using the closed chamber method. Diffusion–based soil gas probes (Schack-Kirchner et al., 1993) were used to sample soil air at the end of each closed chamber measurement. A diffusion-reaction model (Maier et al., 2017) will be  used to fit measured and modelled concentrations of <sup>15</sup>N labelled N<sub>2</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O. Depth-specific values of denitrification rates and the denitrification product ratio will be obtained from best fits of depth profiles and chamber accumulation, taking into account diffusion of labelled denitrification products to the subsoil (Well et al., 2019).</p><p>Depending on the outcome of this evaluation, the gradient method could be used for continuous monitoring of denitrification in the field based on soil gas probe sampling. This could replace or enhance current approaches by improving the detection limit, facilitating sampling and delivering information on depth-specific denitrification.  </p><p>References:</p><p>Lewicka-Szczebak D, Lewicki MP, Well R (2020) N2O isotope approaches for source partitioning of N2O production and estimation of N2O reduction – validation with the 15N gas-flux method in laboratory and field studies. Biogeosciences, <strong>17</strong>, 5513-5537.</p><p>Maier M, Longdoz B, Laemmel T, Schack-Kirchner H, Lang F (2017) 2D profiles of CO2, CH4, N2O and gas diffusivity in a well aerated soil: measurement and Finite Element Modeling. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, <strong>247</strong>, 21-33.</p><p>Maier M, Schack-Kirchner H (2014) Using the gradient method to determine soil gas flux: A review. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, <strong>192</strong>, 78-95.</p><p>Schack-Kirchner H, Hildebrand EE, Wilpert KV (1993) Ein konvektionsfreies Sammelsystem für Bodenluft. Zeitschrift Fur Pflanzenernahrung Und Bodenkunde, <strong>156</strong>, 307-310.</p><p>Well R, Maier M, Lewicka-Szczebak D, Koster JR, Ruoss N (2019) Underestimation of denitrification rates from field application of the N-15 gas flux method and its correction by gas diffusion modelling. Biogeosciences, <strong>16</strong>, 2233-2246.</p><p> </p><p> </p>


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