12:00 PM - 12:15 PM
[AGE30-06] Seasonal variations in methane emissions via plant and ebullition from rice paddies
Keywords:rice paddy, methane, ebullition, Monitoring
Field monitoring was conducted at a continuously flooded rice paddy in Tsukubamirai City, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. The monitoring periods were from 27-May to 24-Sep., 2021. Four different treatments were set: rice paddies with/without rice plant (Oryza sataiva, cv Koshihikari) and with/without straw application, with three replications. The dimension of the plot was 30 cm x 60 cm with four hills of rice (for plots with rice plants), each consisting of three rice plants. TEROS-12 sensors for measuring soil moisture, soil temperature, and electric conductivity (EC) were installed at 5 cm and 10 cm depths in each plot. Methane emissions were measured weekly using a closed-chamber method with a portable spectroscopic gas analyzer (G4301, Piccaro, Inc., CA, USA). Methane emissions via rice plants and by ebullition were separately quantified following Kajiura and Tokida (2021).
High methane ebullition rates, accounting for >50% of the total emission, were observed during heading (HD) stage. The application of rice straws increased both methane fluxes via rice plant and ebullition during panicle formation (PF) and booting (BT) stages. Throughout the growth period, soil temperature, atmospheric pressure, and volumetric air content (i.e., bubble volume) were not correlated with the magnitude of ebullition, while a positive correlation was observed between plant-mediated emission and bubble volume during PF and BT stages.