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    Evaluating Cropland N2O Emissions and Fertilizer Plant Greenhouse Gas Emissions With Airborne Observations

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    Agricultural activity is a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions. The fertilizer production process emits N2O, CO2, and CH4, and fertilized croplands emit N2O. We present continuous airborne observations of these trace gases in the Lower Mississippi River Basin to quantify emissions from both fertilizer plants and croplands during the early growing season. Observed hourly emission rates from two fertilizer plants are compared with reported inventory values, showing agreement for N2O and CO2 emissions but large underestimation in reported CH4 emissions by up to a factor of 100. These CH4 emissions are consistent with loss rates of 0.6ā€“1.2%. We quantify regional emission fluxes (100 km) of N2O using the airborne mass balance technique, a first application for N2O, and explore linkages to controlling processes. Finally, we demonstrate the ability to use airborne measurements to distinguish N2O emission differences between neighboring fields, determining we can distinguish different emission behaviors of regions on the order of 2.5 km2 with emissions differences of approximately 0.026 Ī¼mol māˆ’2 sāˆ’1. This suggests airborne approaches such as outlined here could be used to evaluate the impact of different agricultural practices at critical fieldā€size spatial scales.Key PointsReported N2O and CO2 emissions from fertilizer plants agree with observations, but CH4 is underestimated by orders of magnitudeWe demonstrate mass balance quantification of N2O emissions from agriculture at 10ā€“100 km scalesAirborne measurements can observe and quantify N2O emission differences between agricultural fields of āˆ¼2.5 km2Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156438/3/jgrd56401.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156438/2/jgrd5640-sup-0001-Figure_SI-S01.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156438/1/jgrd56401_am.pd
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