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Published online 16 October 2007
Published in J Environ Qual 36:1577-1584 (2007)
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2006.0501
© 2007 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Methane Oxidation in an Intensively Cropped Tropical Rice Field Soil under Long-Term Application of Organic and Mineral Fertilizers

D. R. Nayaka, Y. Jagadeesh Babub, A. Dattaa and T. K. Adhyaa,*

a Laboratory of Soil Microbiology, Div. of Crop Production, Central Rice Research Institute, Cuttack, Orissa, India
b School of Geography and Geology, McMaster Univ., Ontario, ON L8S4K1, Canada


Figure 1
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Fig. 1. Methane oxidation pattern in a flooded alluvial soil planted to rice cv. Gayatri (wet season, 2002) under long-term addition of organic (compost) and inorganic fertilizer. Means of three replicate values plotted. [-{diamondsuit}- control, -x- inorganic fertilizer, -•- compost, -{blacktriangleup}- compost + inorganic fertilizer]

 

Figure 2
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Fig. 2. Relationship between different soil physicochemical properties and CH4 oxidation kinetics in an intensively cropped alluvial field under long-term fertilization with organic and inorganic fertilizers.

 





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