Abstract

Nitrous oxide (N2 O), ammonia (NH3 ), and methane (CH4 ) emissions from the manure management chain of livestock production systems are important contributors to greenhouse gases (GHGs) and NH3 emitted by human activities. Several studies have evaluated manure-related emissions and associated key variables at regional, national, or continental scales. However, there have been few studies focusing on the drivers of these emissions using a global dataset. An international project was created (DATAMAN) to develop a global database on GHG and NH3 emissions from the manure management chain (housing, storage, and field) to identify key variables influencing emissions and ultimately to refine emission factors (EFs) for future national GHG inventories and NH3 emission reporting. This paper describes the "field" database that focuses on N2 O and NH3 EFs from land-applied manure and excreta deposited by grazing livestock. We collated relevant information (EFs, manure characteristics, soil properties, and climatic conditions) from published peer-reviewed research, conference papers, and existing databases. The database, containing 5,632 observations compiled from 184 studies, was relatively evenly split between N2 O and NH3 (56 and 44% of the EF values, respectively). The N2 O data were derived from studies conducted in 21 countries on five continents, with New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Kenya, and Brazil representing 86% of the data. The NH3 data originated from studies conducted in 17 countries on four continents, with the United Kingdom, Denmark, Canada, and The Netherlands representing 79% of the data. Wet temperate climates represented 90% of the total database. The DATAMAN field database is available at http://www.dataman.co.nz.

Highlights

  • Livestock production systems are an important source of greenhouse gases (GHGs), contributing between 7 and 18% of global anthropogenic GHG emissions (Grossi, Goglio, Vitali, & Williams, 2018; Hristov et al, 2013)

  • This paper describes the “field” database that focuses on N2O and NH3 emission factor (EF) from land-applied manure and excreta deposited by grazing livestock

  • The default N2O EF for land-applied manure and direct deposition of urine and dung currently used within national GHG inventories is not modified according to climate zone (IPCC, 2006)

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Summary

Introduction

Livestock production systems are an important source of greenhouse gases (GHGs), contributing between 7 and 18% of global anthropogenic GHG emissions (Grossi, Goglio, Vitali, & Williams, 2018; Hristov et al, 2013). These systems are a major source of ammonia (NH3), representing 60% of global emissions (Uwizeye et al, 2020). The most important gases emitted from livestock production systems are methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), and NH3 (Chadwick et al, 2011; Webb et al, 2005) Both CH4 and N2O contribute directly to global warming; N2O contributes to ozone depletion. We hope to be able to expand the database to include this source

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