Differences in responses of ammonia volatilization and greenhouse gas emissions to straw return and paddy-upland rotations
2022
Liu, Yu | Wang, Kunkun | Liao, Shipeng | Ren, Tao | Li, Xiaokun | Cong, Rihuan | Lü, Jianwei
Paddy-upland rotation and/or straw return could improve soil structure and soil nutrient availability. Different previous crops (wheat and/or oilseed rape) and straw return methods (straw mulching and/or returning) might increase soil organic carbon (C) and total nitrogen (N) content, and further affected the ammonia (NH₃) volatilization, nitrous oxide (N₂O), and methane (CH₄) emissions. A comparison study was carried out in a located field experiment started from 2014 in Central China, aiming to exam seasonal and annual NH₃, N₂O, and CH₄ emissions under the wheat-rice (WR) and oilseed rape-rice (OR) rotations. Three treatments were chosen, i.e., (i) no chemical N fertilizer application (PK), (ii) chemical nitrogen-phosphorus-potassium combination (NPK), and (iii) chemical NPK with straw returning (NPK+St). We found that after 3 years of cultivation, treatment with straw return increased soil total N content and organic C by 15.57% and 17.11% on average as compared with the NPK treatment, respectively. Straw return did not generate additional NH₃ and N₂O losses during the rice season after improving soil fertility. However, CH₄ emissions increased by 45.35% on average after straw return in summer. In winter, straw return increased NH₃, N₂O, and CH₄ emissions by 70.12–85.23%, 16.93–22.97%, and 7.18–9.17%, respectively. The stimulation of NH₃ volatilization mainly occurred in the topdressing stage. Compared with WR rotation, OR rotation had no significant effect on NH₃ and CH₄ emissions, and the change of N₂O emission might be related to the increase of soil C and N pools. The retention of residues in the process of straw decomposition may be the main factor leading to the difference of gas emission between the paddy-upland rotation and straw return.
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