Chantel Chizen

Soil Scientist | Educator

Nitrous oxide emissions from productive and degraded potato fields in the Fraser Valley delta of British Columbia


Journal article


Chantel J. Chizen, M. Krzic, T. A. Black, R. Jassal, S. Smukler
Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 2022

DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Chizen, C. J., Krzic, M., Black, T. A., Jassal, R., & Smukler, S. (2022). Nitrous oxide emissions from productive and degraded potato fields in the Fraser Valley delta of British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Soil Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Chizen, Chantel J., M. Krzic, T. A. Black, R. Jassal, and S. Smukler. “Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Productive and Degraded Potato Fields in the Fraser Valley Delta of British Columbia.” Canadian Journal of Soil Science (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Chizen, Chantel J., et al. “Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Productive and Degraded Potato Fields in the Fraser Valley Delta of British Columbia.” Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{chantel2022a,
  title = {Nitrous oxide emissions from productive and degraded potato fields in the Fraser Valley delta of British Columbia},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Canadian Journal of Soil Science},
  author = {Chizen, Chantel J. and Krzic, M. and Black, T. A. and Jassal, R. and Smukler, S.}
}

Abstract

Abstract Soil nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions and potato yield were evaluated under 0, 90, and 120 kg N ha−1 fertilizer rates and two planting dates, at productive and degraded fields in the Fraser Valley delta. During the growing season, N2O emissions were comparable among N fertilizer rates. Following November rainfall, N2O emissions increased by three times with 120 kg N ha−1. In the degraded field, yield did not respond to the increasing N fertilizer rates. These findings suggest that lower N fertilizer rates, especially in fields with degraded soils, can lower N2O emissions from British Columbia potato production.


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