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Abstract (English)
The evaluation of the nitrogen balance of biological farming included the measurement of gaseous emissions during manure composting under practical conditions. The results show that ammonia- and methane emis- sions subside within three to four weeks. Nitrous oxide emissions exhi- bited significantly greater variability with regard to time and place. Ma- xima of nitrous oxide emission were observed mainly after ammonia and methane had decayed. The mean total flux per compost period amounted to 1,322 g m-2 of methane, 76.9 g m-2 of ammonia, and 19.8 g m-2 of ni- trous oxide. The relation of these average values to the mean flux of car- bon dioxide per composting period was 4.6 10-2 for CH4 , 2.7 10-3 for NH3 , and 6.9 10-4 for N 2 O. Both the total average gas flux and the mean ratio of total gas emissions can serve to quantify the impact on the envi- ronment. The average gaseous nitrogen losses measured during manure composting amounted to 6% of the initial nitrogen content. Carbon los- ses account for 35% of the initial carbon content.
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Agrartechnische Forschung, 6 (2000), 2. ISSN: 0948-7298
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Faculty of Agricultural Sciences
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Institute of Agricultural Engineering
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English
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Sustainable Development Goals
BibTeX
@article{Hellebrand2000,
url = {https://hohpublica.uni-hohenheim.de/handle/123456789/10424},
author = {Hellebrand, Hans Jürgen and Kalk, Wolf-Dieter},
title = {Emissions Caused by Manure Composting},
journal = {Agrartechnische Forschung},
year = {2000},
volume = {6},
number = {2},
}