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Improving the economic and environmental performance of a New Zealand hill country farm catchment: 4. Greenhouse gas and carbon stock implications of land management change

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-03, 19:22 authored by Mike DoddMike Dodd, Grant RennieGrant Rennie, Miko Kirschbaum, Donna Giltrap, Daniel Smiley, Tony VanDerWeerden
An integrated catchment management project was established at the Whatawhata Research Centre in the late 1990s to study the implications of land use and management change for a typical New Zealand hill country pastoral farm system. The main changes implemented on the 296 ha Mangaotama block in 2001–2002 included production forest plantation (147 ha), indigenous riparian planting (8 ha); intensification of livestock enterprises and spaced-tree planting. The purpose of this study was to estimate the greenhouse gas (GHG) balance for the catchment farm, incorporating recent measurement and modelling over a 100-year period (excl. soil carbon).

History

Rights statement

© 2020 AgResearch

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Group

Journal title

New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research

ISSN

0028-8233

Citation

Dodd, M. B., Rennie, G., Kirschbaum, M. U. F., Giltrap, D. L., Smiley, D., & van der Weerden, T. J. (2020). Improving the economic and environmental performance of a New Zealand hill country farm catchment: 4. Greenhouse gas and carbon stock implications of land management change. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research. doi:10.1080/00288233.2020.1775656

Contract number

A24434

Job code

27178

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