Wetting and drainage cycles in two New Zealand soil types: Effects on relative gas diffusivity and N2O emissions
2022
Rousset, Camille | Clough, Timothy | Grace, Peter | Rowlings, David | Scheer, Clemens | Lincoln Univ, Dept Soil & Phys Sci, POB 85084, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand. | Agroécologie [Dijon] ; Université de Bourgogne (UB)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Dijon ; Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro) | Queensland Univ Technol, Inst Future Environm, 2 George St, Brisbane, Qld 4000, Australia. | The authors gratefully acknowledge funding (SOW14-GPLER-SP198-LIN) from the New Zealand Fund for Global Partnerships in LivestockEmissions Research (GPLER), an international research fund set up bythe New Zealand Government in support of the Global Research Allianceon Agricultural Greenhouse Gases (GRA)
International audience
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Inglés. Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent greenhouse gas generated in agricultural soils by microbial processes that vary according to soil redox. Soil oxygen (O-2) supply and demand strongly influence soil redox. Migration of O-2 into the soil primarily occurs via gas diffusion, expressed as relative gas diffusivity (D-p/D-o), and is influenced by soil structure (air-filled porosity and tortuosity of pores) and soil water content. Soil N2O emissions have been shown to increase at low values of D-p/D-o but detailed studies examining the relationship between D-p/D-o and soil N2O emissions remain limited, with relatively few soil types examined, and no studies of repeated wetting-drainage cycles. Thus, the objectives of this study were to examine how successive wetting-drainage cycles affected both D-p/D-o dynamics and associated N2O emissions in two New Zealand soils; a pallic silt loam and an allophanic loam, with the latter also having a higher organic matter content. Soil cores, repacked to varying density, were wetted up with N-15 enriched NO3- solution and placed on tension tables where they underwent two consecutive 12-day wetting-drainage cycles from saturation to field capacity (0 to-10 kPa). Over time measurements were made of N2O, N-2, inorganic-N and soluble carbon, while D-p/D-o was modelled using soil physical characteristics. For both soils each wetting-drainage cycle induced N2O fluxes but with 5-fold lower fluxes in the allophanic soil. Greater aggregation and sand content in the allophanic soil generated higher porosity and D-p/D-o values that were almost always greater than recognized anaerobic limits. Thus, wetting-induced N2O fluxes observed in the allophanic soil during early drainage were concluded to result from anaerobic or hypoxic pathways of N2O production potentially within the intra-aggregate zone. While wetting-drainage events induce N2O emissions by altering D-p/D-o and the soil aeration status, the draining of soils, especially soils high in organic matter, may enhance O-2 demand generating anaerobic zones conducive to denitrification. Further detailed studies examining the interaction between soil structure and soil organic matter content and their effect on N2O emissions under wetting-drainage events, with measures of soil O-2, are needed.
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