Impact of Long-Term Application of Fertilizers on N₂O and NO Production Potential in an Intensively Cultivated Sandy Loam Soil
2010
Ding, Weixin | Yagi, Kazuyuki | Cai, Zucong | Han, Fengxiang
Literature reports on N₂O and NO emissions from organic and mineral agricultural soil amended with N-containing fertilizers have reached contradictory conclusions. To understand the influence of organic manure (OM) and chemical fertilizer application on N₂O and NO emissions, we conducted laboratory incubation experiments on an agricultural sandy loam soil exposed to different long-term fertilization practices. The fertilizer treatments were initiated in 1989 at the Fengqiu State Key Agro-ecological Experimental Station and included a control without fertilizer (CK), OM, mineral NPK fertilizer (NPK), mineral NP fertilizer (NP), and mineral NK fertilizer (NK). The proportion of N emitted as NO and N₂O varied considerably among fertilizer treatments, ranging from 0.83% to 2.50% as NO and from 0.08% to 0.36% as N₂O. Cumulative NO emission was highest in the CK treatment after NH ₄ ⁺ -N was added at a rate of 200 mg N kg⁻¹ soil during the 612-h incubation period, whereas the long-term application of fertilizers significantly reduced NO emission by 54-67%. In contrast, the long-term application of NPK fertilizer and OM significantly enhanced N₂O emission by 95.6% and 253%, respectively, compared to CK conditions. The addition of NP fertilizer (no K) significantly reduced N₂O emission by 25.5%, whereas applications of NK fertilizer (no P) had no effect. The difference among the N-fertilized treatments was due probably to discrepancies in the N₂O production potential of the dominant ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) species rather than AOB abundance. The ratio of NO/N₂O was approximately 24 in the CK treatment, significantly higher than those in the N-fertilized treatments (3-11), and it decreased with increasing N₂O production potential in N-fertilized treatments. Our data suggests that the shift in the dominant AOB species might produce reciprocal change in cumulative NO and N₂O emissions.
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