EGU2020-11643, updated on 10 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-11643
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Greenhouse gas emissions mitigation with alternate wetting and drying irrigation of rice agriculture

Benjamin R.K. Runkle1, Arlene Adviento-Borbe2, Michele L. Reba2, Beatriz Moreno-García1, Sandhya Karki1,2, Oluwayinka Iseyemi2, Kosana Suvočarev3, Colby W. Reavis1, and Bennett E. Barr1
Benjamin R.K. Runkle et al.
  • 1University of Arkansas, Biological & Agricultural Engineering, Fayetteville, AR, United States of America (brrunkle@uark.edu)
  • 2USDA-ARS, Delta Water Management Research Unit, Jonesboro, AR, United States of America
  • 3Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California, Davis, CA, United States of America

Rice production contributes roughly 11% of global CH4 anthropogenic emissions while producing food for over 3 billion people. The alternate wetting and drying (AWD) irrigation practice for rice has the potential to conserve water while reducing CH4 emissions through the deliberate, periodic introduction of aerobic soil conditions. Our work in the US Mid-South rice production region has demonstrated, using the eddy covariance method on adjacent fields, that AWD can reduce field CH4 emissions by about 66% without impacting yield. In any strategy, CO2 and N2O emissions should also be monitored to take advantage of the high carbon sequestration potential of rice and low potential N2O emissions. Careful water and fertilizer management can theoretically keep N2O emissions low. All three gases should be managed together, while sustaining or improving harvest yield, to create a sustainable rice production system.

 

We now present 5 years of closed chamber measurements of N2O and CH4 and compare them to the eddy covariance measurements of CH4 and CO2 to derive a more thorough perspective on the net greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions or global warming potential basis of rice production from the highly productive, mechanized, humid, US Mid-South. Global warming potential of GHG emissions from rice systems was dominated by CH4 emissions (74 to 100%), hence mitigating efforts need to focus on CH4 emissions. Greater reduction of CH4 emissions can be achieved by proper AWD management practice combined with adequate N fertilization. We end with a comment on the upcoming challenge of how to sequester CO2 uptake as soil organic matter via litter incorporation without increasing CH4 emissions. 

How to cite: Runkle, B. R. K., Adviento-Borbe, A., Reba, M. L., Moreno-García, B., Karki, S., Iseyemi, O., Suvočarev, K., Reavis, C. W., and Barr, B. E.: Greenhouse gas emissions mitigation with alternate wetting and drying irrigation of rice agriculture, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-11643, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-11643, 2020.

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