Abstract

Ammonia emissions from livestock manure can have detrimental effects on environment, health and reduce the value of the manure as fertiliser. A promising approach for reducing ammonia emissions from dairy farming is the use of urease inhibitors. They were tested in this study under standardised conditions in a laboratory set-up. Four selected inhibitors (designated D, L, K and E) were tested in concentrations of 0.01% and 0.1% of total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN) and at manure temperatures of 18 °C, 20 °C and 25 °C. At 0.1% [TKN] all inhibitors showed a reduction in ammonia emissions at all temperatures settings (22 %–70 %). The reference inhibitor (D) and the modified inhibitor (L) had reduction potentials of 48% and 27%. At 20 °C inhibitor E showed no improvement in the reduction potential compared to the other inhibitors used, and was therefore not tested further. At all temperature settings, inhibitor K at concentrations of 0.1% [TKN] showed the highest reduction at 64%. Mixtures of two different inhibitors (0.1% [TKN], 20 °C) did not improve the reduction effect compared to the pure inhibitors. These ammonia reduction results showed that inhibitor K was the most promising with the potential to be used in further practical studies.

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