Paddy rice fields may contribute to methane (CH4) emission from soil due to anaerobic conditions after flooding. Alternatives to continuous flooding irrigation in rice have been developed to mitigate CH4 efflux into the atmosphere. This study aims to investigate the effects of irrigation managements in the CH4 efflux during the rice growing season. An experiment was carried out at in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, during 2007/08 and 2009/10 growing seasons. The treatments were continuous flooding and intermittent irrigation in 2007/08 and continuous flooding, intermittent irrigation and flush irrigation in 2009/10. Intermittent irrigation is effective in mitigating CH4 efflux from rice fields when climatic conditions enable w...
107-113Rice production has a significant effect on global warming and atmospheric chemistry through...
Methane (CH4) emission fluxes from rice fields as affected by water regime, organic amendment, and r...
Field experiments were conducted in the Prachinburi Rice Research Center (Thailand) from 1994 to 199...
Paddy rice fields may contribute to methane (CH4) emission from soil due to anaerobic conditions aft...
Paddy rice fields may contribute to methane (CH4) emission from soil due to anaerobic conditions aft...
In a study on CH4 emission from flooded rice fields under irrigated conditions, fields planted with ...
In a study on CH4 emission from flooded rice fields under irrigated conditions, fields planted with ...
Tropical rice paddy is considered to be one of the major anthropogenic source of atmospheric methane...
Irrigated rice crops in Brazil correspond to 35% of the total rice area and the preferred irrigation...
Methane (CH4) is one of the dominant greenhouse gases (GHG) widely emitted from rice fields, thus si...
The concentration of methane (CH4) in the atmosphere is increasing at 1% per annum and rice fields a...
Methane (CH4) is one of the dominant greenhouse gases (GHG) widely emitted from rice fields, thus si...
In a greenhouse study, the effect of moisture regimes (continuously flooded, continuously nonflooded...
Conventional lowland rice cultivation involves flooding the paddy from planting to close to harvest,...
Rice cultivation is a major source of methane (CH4) emissions. Intermittent irrigation systems in ri...
107-113Rice production has a significant effect on global warming and atmospheric chemistry through...
Methane (CH4) emission fluxes from rice fields as affected by water regime, organic amendment, and r...
Field experiments were conducted in the Prachinburi Rice Research Center (Thailand) from 1994 to 199...
Paddy rice fields may contribute to methane (CH4) emission from soil due to anaerobic conditions aft...
Paddy rice fields may contribute to methane (CH4) emission from soil due to anaerobic conditions aft...
In a study on CH4 emission from flooded rice fields under irrigated conditions, fields planted with ...
In a study on CH4 emission from flooded rice fields under irrigated conditions, fields planted with ...
Tropical rice paddy is considered to be one of the major anthropogenic source of atmospheric methane...
Irrigated rice crops in Brazil correspond to 35% of the total rice area and the preferred irrigation...
Methane (CH4) is one of the dominant greenhouse gases (GHG) widely emitted from rice fields, thus si...
The concentration of methane (CH4) in the atmosphere is increasing at 1% per annum and rice fields a...
Methane (CH4) is one of the dominant greenhouse gases (GHG) widely emitted from rice fields, thus si...
In a greenhouse study, the effect of moisture regimes (continuously flooded, continuously nonflooded...
Conventional lowland rice cultivation involves flooding the paddy from planting to close to harvest,...
Rice cultivation is a major source of methane (CH4) emissions. Intermittent irrigation systems in ri...
107-113Rice production has a significant effect on global warming and atmospheric chemistry through...
Methane (CH4) emission fluxes from rice fields as affected by water regime, organic amendment, and r...
Field experiments were conducted in the Prachinburi Rice Research Center (Thailand) from 1994 to 199...