|
 Microbiologist Hal
Collins examines soil bacteria that cause nitrogen gas to escape from crop
fields into the air. Click the image for more information about
it. |
Climate-Friendly Farming Project Underway
By Jan
Suszkiw June 16, 2005
Reducing greenhouse gases from agriculture is the goal of
Climate Friendly Farming, a five-year
cooperative project involving the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and
Washington State University (WSU).
Agriculture accounts for 7 percent of all U.S. greenhouse gases. For
example, cows release methane while digesting food; applying nitrogen-based
fertilizers leads to nitrous oxide emissions; and tilling speeds the breakdown
of soil organic matter, releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
Agriculture can have positive effects, too. Modifying farm practices
can preempt the formation and release of gases. For example, instead of
tilling, a farmer might adopt direct seeding, a practice that leaves organic
matter relatively undisturbed and increases soil carbon storage, according to
ARS soil scientists
Hal
Collins and
Dave
Huggins. Collins is based at the ARS
Vegetable
and Forage Crops Production Research Unit at Prosser, Wash., and Huggins
works at the ARS
Land
Management and Water Conservation Research Unit at Pullman, Wash.
They're among 30 researchers, Extension agents and others comprising
the Climate Friendly Farming team. The project, led by Chris Feise, director of
WSU's Center for Sustaining Agriculture and
Natural Resources, was established in 2004 to address concerns that
greenhouse gases from farming help drive global climate change.
Collins and Huggins lead research to mitigate emissions from irrigated
and dryland farming systems. WSU scientists oversee dairy research, computer
modeling, socio-economic analyses and farmer outreach.
Collins' projects include evaluating the carbon-sequestering and
organic matter-building potential of fiber obtained from manure that's passed
through an anaerobic digester. He's also tracking the fate of nitrogen that's
been applied to corn and potato crops through center-pivot irrigation.
Huggins, meanwhile, is designing novel cropping systems that avoid
disturbing the soil. Two examples are conventional and organic direct-seeding,
and perennial cropping systems. He's also integrating global positioning and
geographical information systems to devise new methods of applying and using
nitrogen fertilizer that will mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.