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Zhang, Bowen; Tian, Hanqin; Lu, Chaoqun; Dangal, R S Shree; Yang, Jia; Pan, Shufen (2017): Manure nitrogen production and application in cropland and rangeland during 1860 - 2014: A 5-minute gridded global data set for Earth system modeling [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.871980, Supplement to: Zhang, B et al. (2017): Global manure nitrogen production and application in cropland during 1860-2014: a 5 arcmin gridded global dataset for Earth system modeling. Earth System Science Data, 9(2), 667-678, https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-9-667-2017

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Abstract:
Given the important role of nitrogen input from livestock systems in terrestrial nutrient cycles and the atmospheric chemical composition, it is vital to have a robust estimation of the magnitude and spatiotemporal variation in manure nitrogen production and its application to cropland across the globe. In this study, we used the dataset from the Global Livestock Impact Mapping System (GLIMS) in conjunction with country-specific annual livestock populations to reconstruct the manure nitrogen production during 1860-2014. The estimated manure nitrogen production increased from 21.4 Tg N/yr in 1860 to 131.0 Tg N/yr in 2014 with a significant annual increasing trend (0.7 Tg N/ yr, p < 0.01). Changes in manure nitrogen production exhibited high spatial variability and concentrated in several hotspots (e.g., Western Europe, India, northeastern China, and southeastern Australia) across the globe over the study period. In the 1860s, the northern midlatitude region was the largest manure producer, accounting for ~52 % of the global total, while low-latitude regions became the largest share (~48 %) in the most recent 5 years (2010-2014). Among all the continents, Asia accounted for over one-fourth of the global manure production during 1860-2014. Cattle dominated the manure nitrogen production and contributed ~44 % of the total manure nitrogen production in 2014, followed by goats, sheep, swine, and chickens. The manure nitrogen application to cropland accounts for less than one-fifth of the total manure nitrogen production over the study period. The 5 arcmin gridded global dataset of manure nitrogen production generated from this study could be used as an input for global or regional land surface and ecosystem models to evaluate the impacts of manure nitrogen on key biogeochemical processes and water quality. To ensure food security and environmental sustainability, it is necessary to implement proper manure management practices on cropland across the globe.
Comment:
Data are in ascii-format at a spatial resolution of 5 minute by 5 minute (latitude by longitude).Header for ascii-format files - ncols: 4320- nrows: 2124- xllcorner: -180- yllcorner: -88.5- cellsize: 0.0833333- NODATA_value: -9999
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
File contentContentZhang, Bowen
File nameFile nameZhang, Bowen
File formatFile formatZhang, Bowen
File sizeFile sizekByteZhang, Bowenzipped
Uniform resource locator/link to fileURL fileZhang, Bowen
Size:
10 data points

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Total manure nitrogen production in kg N/km**2/yrManNitProASCII grid1267150ManNitPro.zip
Manure nitrogen applied to cropland and rangeland in kg N/km**2/yrManNitProCrpRdASCII grid1096864ManNitProCrpRd.zip