Long-term effects of chlorothalonil on microbial denitrification and N2O emission in a tea field soil
2020
Su, Xiaoxuan | Wang, Yiyu | Peng, Guilong | He, Qiang
Pesticide chlorothalonil is widely applied in tea agroecosystem, potentially disturbing soil microbial-mediated nitrogen cycle. The underlying toxicity mechanism, however, is not well explored. Here, we investigated the long-term effects of chlorothalonil on soil microbial denitrification and N₂O emission pattern in a tea field after 40 days of exposure. Results showed that chlorothalonil inhibited denitrification process but remarkably promoted N₂O emission by 380–830%. Chlorothalonil significantly inhibited N₂O reductase activity but did not affected nosZ abundance. Our results further revealed that chlorothalonil influenced soil denitrification by directly suppressing microbial electron transport system activity, and decreasing electron donor nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and energy source adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels. Additionally, chlorothalonil also downregulated denitrifying functional genes (narG, nirS, and norB) and declined the relative abundances of potential denitrifiers (i.e., Pseudomonas and Streptomyces). Stepwise regression and path modeling suggested that nitrate reductase was the most significant factor in explaining denitrification rate under chlorothalonil applications. This study provides important information for revealing the chronic impacts of pesticide on tea soil denitrification and N₂O emission on the basis of electron transport mechanism. Most significantly, N₂O emission is underestimated in chlorothalonil-treated soils, which suggests that future estimations of N₂O emission from agricultural lands should take account of pesticide dependency conditions.
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