Rice is grown on more than 140 million hectares worldwide and is the most heavily consumed staple food on earth. Ninety percent of the world’s rice is produced and consumed in Asia, and 90 percent of rice land is—at least temporarily—flooded. The unique semiaquatic nature of the rice plant allows it to grow productively in places no other crop could exist, but it is also the reason for its emissions of the major greenhouse gas (GHG), methane. Methane emissions from rice fields are determined mainly by water regime and organic inputs, but they are also influenced by soil type, weather, tillage management, residues, fertilizers, and rice cultivar. Flooding of the soil is a prerequisite for sustained emissions of methane. Recent assessments of...
Methane (CH4) is the dominant greenhouse gas (GHG) implicated in global warming from paddy fields, w...
Climate change and water scarcity threaten the sustainability of rice production systems. Alternate ...
Rice paddies supply half the global population with staple food, but also account for ~48% of greenh...
Rice is grown on more than 140 million hectares worldwide and is the most heavily consumed staple fo...
A sustainable food future will require reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture even ...
Rice is an important global crop while also contributing significant anthropogenic methane (CH _4 ) ...
Methane emissions from rice fields are controlled by several key factors. The most important are the...
Global rice agriculture will be increasingly challenged by water scarcity, while at the same time ch...
This paper reviews the emissions of methane from Paddy rice fields and the various strategies that c...
Rice fields are considered to be among the highest sources of atmospheric methane, an important sour...
Presented to the meeting of the Council for Partnership on Rice Research in Asia (CORRA) on October ...
Roughly one-quarter of global methane emissions to the atmosphere come from the agricultural sector....
Wetland rice cultivation is one of the major sources of atmospheric methane (CH4). Global rice produ...
Methane (CH sub 4) emissions from rice fields were determined using automated measurement systems in...
The study of rice agriculture is necessary for both the importance of rice as a vital food source an...
Methane (CH4) is the dominant greenhouse gas (GHG) implicated in global warming from paddy fields, w...
Climate change and water scarcity threaten the sustainability of rice production systems. Alternate ...
Rice paddies supply half the global population with staple food, but also account for ~48% of greenh...
Rice is grown on more than 140 million hectares worldwide and is the most heavily consumed staple fo...
A sustainable food future will require reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture even ...
Rice is an important global crop while also contributing significant anthropogenic methane (CH _4 ) ...
Methane emissions from rice fields are controlled by several key factors. The most important are the...
Global rice agriculture will be increasingly challenged by water scarcity, while at the same time ch...
This paper reviews the emissions of methane from Paddy rice fields and the various strategies that c...
Rice fields are considered to be among the highest sources of atmospheric methane, an important sour...
Presented to the meeting of the Council for Partnership on Rice Research in Asia (CORRA) on October ...
Roughly one-quarter of global methane emissions to the atmosphere come from the agricultural sector....
Wetland rice cultivation is one of the major sources of atmospheric methane (CH4). Global rice produ...
Methane (CH sub 4) emissions from rice fields were determined using automated measurement systems in...
The study of rice agriculture is necessary for both the importance of rice as a vital food source an...
Methane (CH4) is the dominant greenhouse gas (GHG) implicated in global warming from paddy fields, w...
Climate change and water scarcity threaten the sustainability of rice production systems. Alternate ...
Rice paddies supply half the global population with staple food, but also account for ~48% of greenh...