Acetylene blockage technique leads to underestimation of denitrification rates in oxic soils due to scavenging of intermediate nitric oxide
1997
We used the acetylene inhibition technique to measure the denitrification rates, the rates of gross production or net release of NO by denitrification (NO(D), and the rates of net release of N2O by denitrification (N2O(D)) in 29 different soils. The denitrification rates were measured by accumulation of N2O in the presence of 10 kPa acetylene. The rates of NO(D) and N2O(D) were measured in the presence of only 10 Pa acetylene, which inhibits nitrification, but not denitrification. We assumed that the residual rates of NO and N2O production were due to denitrification. Most of the soils (24 out of 29) showed NO(D) rates that were higher than denitrification rates themselves. Only five soils with very low NO(D) rates had denitrification rates that were higher than the NO(D) rates. The discrepancy between the NO(D) and the denitrification rates increased with increasing NO(D) rates. The discrepancy was highest at a soil moisture content of 70% of the water holding capacity and decreased at higher soil moisture. We have shown that the oxidation of NO to NO2 was enhanced by the presence of acetylene at concentrations > 0.1% (> 0.1 kPa). The resulting NO was taken up by soil. We therefore interpret the observed discrepancies between NO(D) rates and denitrification rates as an artifact created by the acetylene (10 kPa) used in the denitrification assay. The acetylene probably resulted in scavenging of part of the NO that was produced as intermediate in the denitrification sequence and thus could not be further reduced to N2O. Consequently, the denitrification rates were underestimated.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Ключевые слова АГРОВОК
Библиографическая информация
Эту запись предоставил National Agricultural Library