Scientists at Colorado State University are collaborating with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s GRACEnet program to evaluate the carbon footprint of golf courses. GRACEnet is an acronym for the Greenhouse Gas Reduction through Agricultural Carbon Enhancement Network that is under the direction of the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service. To determine the impact of turfgrass management on the greenhouse gas budget on golf courses, the project has made progress in several areas.
A survey of 17 golf course facilities is evaluating the fuel, electricity, and natural gas used over the last three years. The preliminary results suggest that clubhouse and golf cart electricity use was the greatest energy consumption associated with the Colorado golf course operations.
Katrina Gillette, a doctoral graduate student at Colorado State University, has measured changes in greenhouse gases, such as nitrous oxide, methane and carbon dioxide, from golf course fairways, roughs, native areas and putting greens. Eighty-five vented chambers installed on the various areas of a course allow for collection of gas samples from inside the chambers. Weekly measurements taken throughout the growing season and bimonthly in winter produced nearly 15,000 data points collected over a two-year period. Nitrous oxide emissions were greatest from the fairway collection sites, and of the fertilizers tested, POLYON had the lowest loss compared to BCMU and UMAXX. Nitrous oxide emissions from the putting green and native sites were only about 10 percent of the emissions from fairways.
Yao Zhang, another Colorado State University graduate student, has applied the DAYCENT model to turfgrass systems using data from previous field experiments for calibration. Simulated clipping yields, evapotranspiration (ET), nitrate leaching, and soil temperature of Kentucky bluegrass turf compared well with the measured values from golf courses (within 16 percent of the observed values). The DAYCENT model tests best management practices for Kentucky bluegrass rough. For semiarid regions such as Colorado, the model predicts a 50 percent reduction in nitrous oxide emissions when irrigation decreases from replacing 100 percent of ET to 60 percent. The model simulation also suggested that gradually reducing nitrogen fertilization as turf stands age from 0 to 50 years would reduce long-term nitrous oxide emissions by 40 percent. The simulation indicates that the efficient use of resources such as water and fertilizer can have a dramatic effect on the emission of greenhouse gases from golf course turfgrass.
DAYCENT model estimated greenhouse gas budget for high-quality Kentucky bluegrass roughs using (a) conventional management and (b) best management practices. Carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide greenhouse gases are converted to g CO2 m-2 for graphical presentation. The gray area represents the amount of carbon that the grass is able to store in the soil as organic matter. In this example, as the turfgrass ages, using lower amounts of a slow release nitrogen fertilizer significantly reduces the carbon footprint of the golf course rough.
Source: Mike Kenna (mkenna@usga.org)