Surface nitrous oxide concentrations and fluxes from water bodies of the agricultural watershed in Eastern China
2019
Xiao, Qitao | Hu, Zhenghua | Fu, Congsheng | Bian, Hang | Lee, Xuhui | Chen, Shutao | Shang, Dongyao
Agriculture is one of major emission sources of nitrous oxide (N₂O), an important greenhouse gas dominating stratospheric ozone destruction. However, indirect N₂O emissions from agriculture watershed water surfaces are poorly understood. Here, surface-dissolved N₂O concentration in water bodies of the agricultural watershed in Eastern China, one of the most intensive agricultural regions, was measured over a two-year period. Results showed that the dissolved N₂O concentrations varied in samples taken from different water types, and the annual mean N₂O concentrations for rivers, ponds, reservoir, and ditches were 30 ± 18, 19 ± 7, 16 ± 5 and 58 ± 69 nmol L⁻¹, respectively. The N₂O concentrations can be best predicted by the NO3−-N concentrations in rivers and by the NH4+-N concentrations in ponds. Heavy precipitation induced hot moments of riverine N₂O emissions were observed during farming season. Upstream waters are hot spots, in which the N₂O production rates were two times greater than in non-hotspot locations. The modeled watershed indirect N₂O emission rates were comparable to direct emission from fertilized soil. A rough estimate suggests that indirect N₂O emissions yield approximately 4% of the total N₂O emissions yield from N-fertilizer at the watershed scale. Separate emission factors (EF) established for rivers, ponds, and reservoir were 0.0013, 0.0020, and 0.0012, respectively, indicating that the IPCC (Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change) default value of 0.0025 may overestimate the indirect N₂O emission from surface water in eastern China. EF was inversely correlated with N loading, highlighting the potential constraints in the IPCC methodology for water with a high anthropogenic N input.
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