Strategic irrigation of wheat in the Cerrado reduces greenhouse gas emissions by half

Published 2025년 12월 2일

Tridge summary

An unprecedented study by Embrapa Cerrados (DF) revealed that using water strategically in wheat irrigation can halve greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions without loss of productivity. The balance point between productivity and environmental sustainability found by the research improves the management of the cereal in tropical regions in a scenario of climate change.

Original content

Think of the soil as a giant sponge that stores water for plants. Scientists discovered that the perfect time to irrigate wheat is when this sponge has already used 40% of the water it had stored. Researchers tested four irrigation control strategies, equivalent to letting the soil deplete 20%, 40%, 60%, and 80% of the available water before irrigating again. The goal was to find the balance point between crop productivity, water savings, and environmental impact. The research results were published in the article Sustainable irrigation management of winter wheat and effects on soil gas emissions (N2O and CH4) and enzymatic activity in the Brazilian savannah, published in the journal Sustainability MDPI. After two years of experiments, the Embrapa Cerrados team concluded that the ideal time for wheat irrigation occurs when the plants have used 40% of the soil water reserve. "This is the ideal point, with a favorable result between productivity and greenhouse gas emission ...
Source: Agrolink

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