会议专题

Nitrogen cycling in intensively grazed pastures and practices to reduce whole‐farm nitrogen losses

1.A large proportion of the N ( > 70% ) consumed by grazing animals is excreted and this excreta is the main source of N losses from grazed pastures by ammonia (NH3 ) volatilisation, nitrous oxide (N2 O) emission and nitrate (NO-3 ) leaching.2.Management strategies and practices that can reduce N losses in grazing systems include optimising N inputs, manipulating soil N cycling processes, selecting for plants and animals that maximise N utilisation and altering grazing and feeding management.3.Using stand‐off/feed pads or housing systems for removing grazing animals off pasture during greatest risk periods of N loss can reduce excreta deposition to soil at these times, thereby reducing N leaching and N2 O emissions.However, NH3 losses as a result of.N pollution swapping need to be controlled.4.Mitigation strategies and practices always need to be evaluated in a whole farm system context to ensure overall efficiency gains through decreasing N losses per unit of animal production and to achieve a tighter N cycle.

Nitrogen grazed pasture leaching nitrous oxide ammonia nitrogen loss mitigation strategy

S.F.Ledgard J.Luo

AgResearch,Ruakura Research Centre,Private Bag 3123,Hamilton,New Zealand

国际会议

2008世界草地与草原大会

呼和浩特

英文

2008-06-29(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)