Fertiliser use increase atmospheric N20 levels

University of California, Berkeley, chemists in the US have shown that increased fertiliser use over the past 50 years has contributed to the rise in atmospheric N2O levels. Nitrous oxide is a major green house gas, but although scientists assumed the increased levels of the gas were caused by nitrogen-based fertilisers stimulating soil-based microbes to convert the nitrogen to N2O, evidence to back up this claim was sparse.

The study, published in Nature Geoscience (DOI: 10.1038/ngeo1421) used isotopic ratios to identify the fingerprint of fertiliser in air samples taken from Antarctica and Tasmania. The researchers admit that, while fertiliser use can't be ended, they hope that their findings will contribute to changes in agricultural practice that will cut levels of N2O from farming.


Related Content

Nitrous oxide

11 July 2012 Podcast | Compounds

news image

This week's podcast is about nitrous oxide

In a fix

1 October 2009 Premium contentFeature

news image

Billions of people owe their lives to our ability to grab nitrogen out of the air to fertilise our crops. But there can be to...

Most Read

US Supreme Court rules in favour of Monsanto

22 May 2013 News and Analysis

news image

An Indiana farmer who was trying to replicate Monsanto-patented seeds infringed on the company’s intellectual property righ...

Growing a microgarden

17 May 2013 Research

news image

Barium carbonate crystals have been coaxed to form nano-flowers by controlling their chemical environment

Most Commented

B-vitamins may delay Alzheimer’s onset

21 May 2013 Research

news image

Taking B-vitamins keeps brain tissue healthier for longer, and may help stave off dementia

3D printer churns out bionic ear

17 May 2013 Research

news image

Seamless integration of electronics and tissue could be used with other artificial implants and synthetic organs