Agriculture is one of the biggest
sources of greenhouse gases. Rice production has been identified as one
of the
major sources of greenhouse gases, especially methane. However, data on
the
contributions of rice towards greenhouse gas emissions in tropical
Africa are limited. In
Zimbabwe, as in most of Sub-Saharan Africa, there are very few studies
that
have explored greenhouse
gas emissions from agricultural lands. This study
reports the first dataset on greenhouse gas emissions from
intermittently
flooded rice paddies in Zimbabwe. The objective of this study was to
quantify greenhouse gas emissions from dambo rice under different
tillage treatments,
which were conventional tillage, no tillage, tied ridges, tied fallows,
and mulching. Average soil nitrous
oxide emissions were 5.9, 0.2, 5.4, 5.2 and 7.8
μg·m-2·hr-1 for tied fallows, conventional tillage, tied
ridges, mulching and no tillage respectively. Average methane emission was 0.35
mg·m-2·hr-1 and maximum as 1.62 mg·m-2·hr-1.
Average methane emissions for the different tillage systems were 0.20, 0.18,
0.45, 0.52 and 0.38 mg·m-2·hr-1 for tied fallows,
conventional tillage, tied ridges, mulching and no tillage respectively. Carbon
dioxide emissions were 98.1, 56.0, 69.9, 94.8 and 95.5 mg·m-2·hr-1
for tied fallows, conventional tillage, tied ridges, mulching and no
tillage respectively. The estimated emissions per 150 day cropping
season were 1.4, 3.6 and 0.6 kg·ha-1 for methane, carbon dioxide and
nitrous oxide respectively. We concluded that
intermittently saturated dambo rice Paddys are a potential source of greenhouse
gases which is important to global greenhouse gas budgets,
thus, they deserve more careful study.
We have created this Blog and the database to provide a place where the scientific community can share and update the fast growing knowledge and data on the study of greenhouse gas CO2, CH4, and N2O fluxes in Africa.
We are grateful for the numerous researchers and technicians who provide invaluable data. It is impossible to cite all the references due to limited space allowed and we apologize for the authors whose work has not been cited.
Nyamadzawo et al. 2013. Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Intermittently Flooded (Dambo) Rice under Different Tillage Practices in Chiota Smallholder Farming Area of Zimbabwe
G. Nyamadzawo, M. Wuta, N. Chirinda, L. Mujuru and J. Smith, "Greenhouse
Gas Emissions from Intermittently Flooded (Dambo) Rice under Different
Tillage Practices in Chiota Smallholder Farming Area of Zimbabwe," Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, Vol. 3 No. 4A, 2013, pp. 13-20. doi: 10.4236/acs.2013.34A003.
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