Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences (Feb 2012)

Contribution of Urine and Dung Patches from Grazing Sheep to Methane and Carbon Dioxide Fluxes in an Inner Mongolian Desert Grassland

  • Yuanyuan Jiang,
  • Shiming Tang,
  • Chengjie Wang,
  • Pei Zhou,
  • Mario Tenuta,
  • Guodong Han,
  • Ding Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5713/ajas.2011.11261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 207 – 212

Abstract

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The effects of sheep urine and dung patches on methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes were investigated during the summer-autumn in 2010, to evaluate their contribution to climate change in a desert grassland in Inner Mongolia, China. Results indicate that the cumulative CH4 emissions for dung patches, urine patches and control plots were − −0.076, −0.084, and −0.114 g/m2 and these were net CH4 sinks during the measured period. The level of CH4 intake from urine and dung plots decreased 25.7%, and 33.3%, respectively, compared with a control plot. CO2 fluxes differed (p<0.01) in urine plots, with an average of 569.20 mg/m2/h compared with control plots (357.62 mg/m2/h) across all sampling days. Dung patches have cumulative CO2 emissions that were 15.9% higher compared with the control during the 55-d period. Overall, sheep excrement weakened CH4 intake and increased CO2 emissions.

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