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Arable Farming
Cropping
Zero till may not be as environmentally friendly as we thought.
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<blockquote data-quote="SilliamWhale" data-source="post: 6917550" data-attributes="member: 1232"><p>Howd you mean? Im saying if you extend the argument about nox logically to apply to all soil types then this is what the scenario would be.</p><p></p><p>Which is why the NOX debate isnt a strong enough one in the longer term. All waterlogged soils will give off nox.</p><p></p><p>Its not as if soils suddenly start giving off nox the day after no till drilling the next crop and the neighbouring one gets ploughed is it? Nox emissions are probably a function of wetter soils period not really no till soils. How about a winter stubble then?</p><p></p><p>N is such a tricky one in the climate context. We could all stop using artificial N and our theoretical ghg emissions could go down and we's be feeling smug. Hungry but smug!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SilliamWhale, post: 6917550, member: 1232"] Howd you mean? Im saying if you extend the argument about nox logically to apply to all soil types then this is what the scenario would be. Which is why the NOX debate isnt a strong enough one in the longer term. All waterlogged soils will give off nox. Its not as if soils suddenly start giving off nox the day after no till drilling the next crop and the neighbouring one gets ploughed is it? Nox emissions are probably a function of wetter soils period not really no till soils. How about a winter stubble then? N is such a tricky one in the climate context. We could all stop using artificial N and our theoretical ghg emissions could go down and we's be feeling smug. Hungry but smug! [/QUOTE]
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Arable Farming
Cropping
Zero till may not be as environmentally friendly as we thought.
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