Greater nitrogen availability, nitrous oxide emissions, and vegetable yields with fall-applied chicken relative to horse manure

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Abstract

Optimal manure management can maximize agronomic benefits and minimize environmental impacts. Field experiments were conducted in the Pacific Northwest (Vancouver, Canada) to determine how chicken and horse manures that were fall-applied to meet nitrogen crop demand affect soil ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3−), apparent net mineralization (ANM) and nitrification (ANN), crop biomass and nutrient concentration, and fluxes of nitrous oxide (N2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), and methane (CH4). Relative to horse manure, chicken manure increased soil NH4+ by 60-fold, ANM by 2-fold, and ANN by 4-fold. Emissions of N2O (+600%) and CO2 (+45%) were greater and growing season CO2 emissions (−40%) were lower after application of chicken than horse manure. Productivity of cover crop (+30%), legume cover crop (−25%), and squash cash crop (+20%) were affected by chicken relative to horse manure. Overall, fall-applied chicken manure increased yields, N availability, and environmental impacts relative to horse manure.

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APA

Maltais-Landry, G., Nesic, Z., Grant, N., Thompson, B., & Smukler, S. M. (2019). Greater nitrogen availability, nitrous oxide emissions, and vegetable yields with fall-applied chicken relative to horse manure. Agronomy, 9(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy9080444

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