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Effects of warming and elevated O3 concentrations on N2O emission and soil nitrification and denitrification rates in a wheat-soybean rotation cropland
2020
Wang, Yuanyuan | Hu, Zhenghua | Shang, Dongyao | Xue, Ying | Islam, A.R.M Towfiqul | Chen, Shutao
The effects of warming and elevated ozone (O₃) concentrations on nitrous oxide (N₂O) emission from cropland has received increasing attention; however, the small number of studies on this topic impedes understanding. A field experiment was performed to explore the role of warming and elevated O₃ concentrations on N₂O emission from wheat-soybean rotation cropland from 2012 to 2013 using open-top chambers (OTCs). Experimental treatments included ambient temperature (control), elevated temperature (+2 °C), elevated O₃ (100 ppb), and combined elevated temperature (+2 °C) and O₃ (100 ppb). Results demonstrate that warming significantly increased the accumulative amount of N₂O (AAN) emitted from the soil-winter wheat system due to enhanced nitrification rates in the wheat farmland and nitrate reductase activity in wheat leaves. However, elevated O₃ concentrations significantly decreased AAN emission from the soil-soybean system owing to reduced nitrification rates in the soybean farmland. The combined treatment of warming and elevated O₃ inhibited the emission of N₂O from the soybean farmland. Additionally, both the warming and combined treatments significantly increased soil nitrification rates in winter wheat and soybean croplands and decreased denitrification rates in the winter wheat cropping system. Our results suggest that global warming and elevated O₃ concentrations will strongly affect N₂O emission from wheat-soybean rotation croplands.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]A stable simultaneous anammox, denitrifying anaerobic methane oxidation and denitrification process in integrated vertical constructed wetlands for slightly polluted wastewater
2020
Huang, Tao | Liu, Wei | Zhang, Yi | Zhou, Qiaohong | Wu, Zhenbin | He, Feng
Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), denitrifying anaerobic methane oxidation bacteria (DAMO) have received great attention for their excellent performance in nitrogen removal. However, not much study focused on the co-existence of anammox, DAMO, and denitrification in constructed wetlands, not to mention the advantage of their application in mitigating the necessary byproduct nitrous oxide (N₂O), methane (CH₄) from the biodegradation process. In this study, the result indicated the construction of integrated vertical constructed wetlands (IVCWs) contributed to the high-efficient stable simultaneous anammox, DAMO and denitrification (SADD) process for the nutrients removal, with denitrification being the least contributor to nitrogen reduction. Besides the succession of SADD process was largely the driver for the variation of N₂O, CH₄ emission. The structural equation method (SEM) further suggested that the three biological pathways of qnorB/bacteria, archaea/qnorB, and anammox/nirK accounted for the N₂O production, as were top-controlled by mcrA/DAMO in IVCWs. Besides the anammox-associated nitrifier denitrification was the main source for N₂O production. And that the trade-off effect between the CH₄ and N₂O production was exerted by the DAMO, while the influence was far from satisfactory under the methane constraints.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]An urban polluted river as a significant hotspot for water–atmosphere exchange of CH4 and N2O
2020
Wang, Rui | Zhang, Han | Zhang, Wei | Zheng, Xunhua | Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus | Li, Siqi | Han, Shenghui
Polluted urban river systems might be a strong source of atmospheric methane (CH₄) and nitrous oxide (N₂O), but so far only a few urban river systems have been quantified with regard to their source strength for greenhouse gases (GHGs). In this study, we measured loads of dissolved inorganic nitrogen and organic carbon, dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations, and fluxes of CH₄ and N₂O from an urban river in Beijing, China during the course of an entire year. Fluxes calculated using the floating chamber approach or via the diffusion method with measurements of river water GHG concentrations showed comparable temporal variations. However, the flux magnitude based on the diffusion method was found to strongly depend on the underlying parameterization of the gas transfer velocity. In view of the large differences while applying different methodologies to estimate surface water GHG fluxes further studies are still needed to prove and eventually quantify the systematic errors which are likely caused by either the chamber technique or the approaches of individual diffusion models. For both the floating chamber and the diffusion-based flux estimates, strong seasonal variations in CH₄ and N₂O fluxes from the river surface were observed, with fluxes ranging from 3 to 8374 μg C m⁻² h⁻¹ for CH₄ and 1–3986 μg N m⁻² h⁻¹ for N₂O. The CH₄ fluxes were strongly negatively correlated with the DO concentration (P < 0.01). The highest N₂O fluxes were observed at times with low CH₄ fluxes (i.e., in spring and autumn). Annual CH₄ and N₂O fluxes totaled 19.3–79.4 and 17.4–44.8 kg C (N) ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹, respectively. These high fluxes are in agreement with estimates from the few other studies carried out for urban river systems to date and indicate that urban polluted river systems are a significant regional source of atmospheric GHGs.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Wood vinegar and biochar co-application mitigates nitrous oxide and methane emissions from rice paddy soil: A two-year experiment
2020
Feng, Yanfang | Li, Detian | Sun, Haijun | Xue, Lihong | Zhou, Beibei | Yang, Linzhang | Liu, Jiayou | Xing, Baoshan
Both biochar (BC) and wood vinegar (WV) influence the nitrous oxide (N₂O) and methane (CH₄) emissions from agricultural systems. However, the impacts of BC and WV co-application on rice production, N₂O and CH₄ emissions are not well documented. We here conducted a two-year soil columns experiment with four treatments: WV (5 t WV ha⁻¹), BC (7.5 t BC ha⁻¹), WV + BC (5 t WV ha⁻¹ +7.5 t BC ha⁻¹) and a control (no treatment). The results showed that BC and WV + BC produced higher rice grain yield than the control by 14.1–15.9% in 2016 and by 4.1–5.2% in 2017, respectively. While WV increased rice grain yield by 11.2% in 2016, it had no significant influence on yield in 2017. Both WV and BC significantly mitigated N₂O emissions by 22.4–41.8% in 2016 and 22.4–36.9% in 2017, respectively. Interestingly, WV + BC treatment showed the highest N₂O mitigation efficiency, with a 52.9–62.8% mitigations in 2016 and 2017. Furthermore, the co-application of WV and BC significantly mitigated CH₄ emissions by 42.6% in 2016 and 35.3% in 2017, respectively, while applying WV or BC alone had no annually-consistent mitigation effect on CH₄ emissions. Overall, GWPt of rice growth cycle was most significantly suppressed by WV + BC with a 48.7–56.1% reduction, followed by WV and BC with 20.4–28.0% and 19.7–35.7% reductions, respectively. Consequently, the WV + BC treatment had the highest GHGI mitigation effect, averaging with 56.7% over two consecutive rice growth cycles. In conclusion, co-application of WV and BC is recommended for rice cultivation, which can both improve rice yield and minimize GHG emissions.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Surface nitrous oxide (N2O) concentrations and fluxes from different rivers draining contrasting landscapes: Spatio-temporal variability, controls, and implications based on IPCC emission factor
2020
Zhang, Wangshou | Li, Hengpeng | Xiao, Qitao | Jiang, Sanyuan | Li, Xinyan
Increasing indirect nitrous oxide (N₂O) emission from river networks as a result of enhanced human activities on landscapes has become a global issue, as N₂O has been widely recognized as an important ozone-depleting greenhouse gas. However, indirect N₂O emissions from different rivers, particularly for those that drain completely different landscapes, are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the spatial-temporal variability of N₂O emissions among the different rivers in the Chaohu Lake Basin of Eastern China. Our results showed that river reaches in urban watersheds are the hotspots of N₂O production, with a mean N₂O concentration of ∼410 nmol L⁻¹, which is 9–18 times greater than those mainly draining forested (23 nmol L⁻¹), agricultural (42 nmol L⁻¹) and mixed (45 nmol L⁻¹) landscapes. Riverine dissolved N₂O was generally supersaturated with respect to the atmosphere. Such N₂O saturation can best be explained by nitrogen availability, except for those in the forested watersheds, where dissolved oxygen is thought to be the primary predictor. The estimated N₂O fluxes in urban rivers reached ∼471 μmol m⁻² d⁻¹, a value of ∼22, 13, and 11 times that in forested, agricultural and mixed watersheds, respectively. Averaged riverine N₂O emission factors (EF₅ᵣ) of the forested, agricultural, urban and mixed watersheds were 0.066%, 0.12%, 0.95% and 0.16%, respectively, showing different deviations from the default EF₅ᵣ that released by IPCC in 2019. This points to a need for more field measurements with wider spatial coverage and finer frequency to further refine the EF₅ᵣ and to better reveal the mechanisms behind indirect N₂O emissions as influenced by watershed landscapes.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Biochar amendment mitigates greenhouse gases emission and global warming potential in dairy manure based silage corn in boreal climate
2020
Ashiq, Waqar | Nadeem, Muhammad | Ali, Waqas | Zaeem, Muhammad | Wu, Jianghua | Galagedara, Lakshman | Thomas, Raymond | Kavanagh, Vanessa | Cheema, Mumtaz
About 11% of the global anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs) emissions result from agricultural practices. Dairy manure (DM) application to soil is regarded as a best management practice due to C sequestration and improvement of soil physiochemical properties. However, GHGs emissions from the soil following the DM application could offset its advantages. Biochar (BC) is known to affect N transformation and GHGs emissions from soil. There had been considerably less focus on the BC amendment and its effects on GHGs emissions following DM application under field conditions. The objectives of this study were; i) to determine the temporal patterns and cumulative GHGs fluxes following DM and inorganic nitrogen (IN) application and, ii) to investigate BC amendment impact on DMY, GWP, direct N₂O emission factor (EFd) and the response of CH₄ emissions (RC) in DM based silage corn. To achieve these objectives a two-year field experiment was conducted with these treatments: 1) DM with high N conc. (DM₁: 0.37% N); 2) DM with low N conc. (DM₂: 0.13% N); 3) IN; 4) DM₁+BC; 5) DM₂+BC; 6) IN + BC; and 7) Control (N₀); and were laid out in randomized complete block design with four replications. BC amendment to DM₁, DM₂ and IN significantly reduced cumulative CO₂ emission by 16, 25.5 and 26.5%, CH₄ emission by 184, 200 and 293% and N₂O emission by 95, 86 and 93% respectively. It also reduced area-scaled and yield-scaled GWP, EFd, RC and enhanced DMY. Thus, BC application showed great potential to offset the negative effects of DM application i.e GHGs emissions from the silage corn cropping system. Further research is needed to evaluate soil organic carbon and nitrogen dynamics (substrates for GHG emissions) after DM and BC application on various soil types and cropping systems under field conditions.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]The bacterial microbiota in florfenicol contaminated soils: The antibiotic resistome and the nitrogen cycle
2020
Wang, Mei | Xie, Xiying | Wang, Mianzhi | Wu, Jing | Zhou, Qin | Sun, Yongxue
Soil antibiotic resistome and the nitrogen cycle are affected by florfenicol addition to manured soils but their interactions have not been fully described. In the present study, antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and nitrogen cycle genes possessed by soil bacteria were characterized using real-time fluorescence quantification PCR (qPCR) and metagenomic sequencing in a short-term (30 d) soil model experiment. Florfenicol significantly changed in the abundance of genes conferring resistance to aminoglycosides, β-lactams, tetracyclines and macrolides. And the abundance of Sphingomonadaceae, the protein metabolic and nitrogen metabolic functions, as well as NO reductase, nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase and N₂O reductase can also be affected by florfenicol. In this way, ARG types of genes conferring resistance to aminoglycosides, β-lactamases, tetracyclines, colistin, fosfomycin, phenicols and trimethoprim were closely associated with multiple nitrogen cycle genes. Actinobacteria, Chlorobi, Firmicutes, Gemmatimonadetes, Nitrospirae, Proteobacteria and Verrucomicrobia played an important role in spreading of ARGs. Moreover, soil physicochemical properties were important factors affecting the distribution of soil flora. This study provides a theoretical basis for further exploration of the transmission regularity and interference mechanism of ARGs in soil bacteria responsible for nitrogen cycle.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]Examining CO2 and N2O pollution and reduction from forestry application of pure and mixture forest
2020
Kong, Yuhua | Ma, Nyuk Ling | Yang, Xitian | Lai, Yong | Feng, Zhipei | Shao, Xinliang | Xu, Xingkai | Zhang, Dangquan
Greenhouse gases (GHGs) carbon dioxide (CO₂) and nitrous oxide (N₂O), contribute significantly to global warming, and they have increased substantially over the years. Reforestation is considered as an important forestry application for carbon sequestration and GHGs emission reduction, however, it remains unknown whether reforestation may instead produce too much CO₂ and N₂O contibuting to GHGs pollution. This study was performed to characterize and examine the CO₂ and N₂O emissions and their controlling factors in different species and types of pure and mixture forest used for reforestation. Five soil layers from pure forest Platycladus orientalis (PO), Robinia pseudoacacia (RP), and their mixed forest P-R in the Taihang mountains of central China were sampled and incubated aerobically for 11 days. The P-R soil showed lower CO₂ and N₂O production potentials than those of the PO soils (P < 0.01). The average reduction rate of cumulative CO₂ and N₂O was 31.63% and 14.07%, respectively. If the mixed planting pattern is implemented for reforestation, the annual CO₂ reduction amounts of China’s plantation can be achieved at 8.79 million tonnes. With the increase of soil depths, cumulative CO₂ production in PO and RP soils decreased, whereas CO₂ and N₂O production in P-R soil did not show similar pattern. Soil particle size fraction was the main factor influencing GHGs emissions, and the clay fraction showed negative correlation with cumulative CO₂ and N₂O production. In summary, compared with PO pure artificial forests, the mixture plantation mode can not only reduce GHGs pollution but also improve soil fertility, which is conducive to sustainable management of artificial forests.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]N2O emissions and product ratios of nitrification and denitrification are altered by K fertilizer in acidic agricultural soils
2020
Li, Zhiguo | Xia, Shujie | Zhang, Runhua | Zhang, Runqin | Chen, Fang | Liu, Yi
Potassium (K) fertilizer plays an important role in increasing crop yield, quality, and nitrogen use efficiency. However, little is known about its environmental impacts, such as its effects on emissions of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N₂O). A nitrogen-15 (¹⁵N) tracer laboratory experiment was therefore performed in an acidic agricultural soil in the suburbs of Wuhan, central China, to determine the effects of K fertilizer on N₂O emissions and nitrification/denitrification product ratios under N fertilization. During 15-d incubation periods with a fixed initial N concentration (80 mg kg⁻¹), K application increased average N₂O emission rates significantly (1.6–10.8-fold) compared to the control treatment. N₂O emissions derived from nitrification and denitrification both increased in K-treated soil, and denitrification contributed more to the increase; its contribution ratio rose from 32% without K fertilizer to 53% with 300 mg kg⁻¹ of K applied. The increase in N₂O emissions under K fertilization is probably due to an increase in the activity of denitrifying microorganisms and acid-resistant nitrifying microorganisms caused by higher K⁺ concentrations and lower soil pH. Combined treatment with potassium chloride (KCl) and N fertilizer produced lower N₂O emissions than combined treatment with potassium sulfate (K₂SO₄) and N fertilizer during 15-d incubation periods. Our results imply that there are significant interaction effects between N fertilizers and K fertilizers on N₂O emissions. In particular, combining N fertilizers with fertilizers that reduce soil acidity or contain Cl or K ions may significantly affect agricultural N₂O emissions.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]The conversion of subtropical forest to tea plantation changes the fungal community and the contribution of fungi to N2O production
2020
Zheng, Ningguo | Yu, Yongxiang | Wang, Juan | Chapman, Stephen J. | Yao, Huaiying | Zhang, Yingying
The conversion of natural forests to tea plantations largely affects soil nitrous oxide (N₂O) emissions and soil microbial communities. However, the impacts of this conversion on the contribution of fungi to N₂O emission and on fungal community structure remain unclear. In this study, we determined the soil N₂O emission rate, N₂O production by fungi, associated fungal community diversity, and related ecological factors in chronological changes of tea crop systems (3, 36 and 105 years old tea orchards named T3, T36 and T105, respectively), and in an adjacent soil from a natural forest. The results indicate that the tea plantations significantly enhanced soil N₂O production compared with the forest soil. Tea plantations significantly decreased soil pH and C/N ratio, but increased soil inorganic nitrogen (N). Furthermore, they increased the fungal contribution to the production of soil N₂O, but decreased the bacterial counterpart. We also observed that fungal community and functional composition differed distinctly between tea plantations and forest. Additionally, most of the fungal groups in high N₂O emission soils (T36 and T105) were identified as the genus Fusarium, which were positively correlated with soil N₂O emissions. The variation in N₂O emission response could be well explained by NO₃⁻-N, soil organic carbon (SOC), C/N, and Fusarium, which contributed to up to 97% of the observed variance. Altogether, these findings provide significant direct evidence that the increase of soil N₂O emissions and fungal communities be attributed to the conversion of natural forest to tea plantations.
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