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1.
During two intensive field campaigns in summer and autumn 2004 nitrogen (N2O, NO/NO2) and carbon (CO2, CH4) trace gas exchange between soil and the atmosphere was measured in a sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) forest in Hungary. The climate can be described as continental temperate. Fluxes were measured with a fully automatic measuring system allowing for high temporal resolution. Mean N2O emission rates were 1.5 μg N m−2 h−1 in summer and 3.4 μg N m−2 h−1 in autumn, respectively. Also mean NO emission rates were higher in autumn (8.4 μg N m−2 h−1) as compared to summer (6.0 μg N m−2 h−1). However, as NO2 deposition rates continuously exceeded NO emission rates (−9.7 μg N m−2 h−1 in summer and −18.3 μg N m−2 h−1 in autumn), the forest soil always acted as a net NO x sink. The mean value of CO2 fluxes showed only little seasonal differences between summer (81.1 mg C m−2 h−1) and autumn (74.2 mg C m−2 h−1) measurements, likewise CH4uptake (summer: −52.6 μg C m−2 h−1; autumn: −56.5 μg C m−2 h−1). In addition, the microbial soil processes net/gross N mineralization, net/gross nitrification and heterotrophic soil respiration as well as inorganic soil nitrogen concentrations and N2O/CH4 soil air concentrations in different soil depths were determined. The respiratory quotient (ΔCO2 resp ΔO2 resp−1) for the uppermost mineral soil, which is needed for the calculation of gross nitrification via the Barometric Process Separation (BaPS) technique, was 0.8978 ± 0.008. The mean value of gross nitrification rates showed only little seasonal differences between summer (0.99 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1) and autumn measurements (0.89 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1). Gross rates of N mineralization were highest in the organic layer (20.1–137.9 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1) and significantly lower in the uppermost mineral layer (1.3–2.9 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1). Only for the organic layer seasonality in gross N mineralization rates could be demonstrated, with highest mean values in autumn, most likely caused by fresh litter decomposition. Gross mineralization rates of the organic layer were positively correlated with N2O emissions and negatively correlated with CH4 uptake, whereas soil CO2 emissions were positively correlated with heterotrophic respiration in the uppermost mineral soil layer. The most important abiotic factor influencing C and N trace gas fluxes was soil moisture, while the influence of soil temperature on trace gas exchange rates was high only in autumn.  相似文献   

2.
Here we report on a controlled environment experiment in which we applied 13C- and 15N-enrichment approaches to quantify methane oxidation rates and source partition N2O production in a silt loam soil following application of NH4NO3, enabling us to look for potential interactions between methane oxidation and nitrifier-N2O production. 15N-N2O, 14+15N-N2O and CO2 fluxes and mineral N concentrations were measured over a 23-day period after application of NH4NO3 (5 at.% excess 15N) at rates of 0, 5, 10, 20, 30 and 40 g N m?2 to a silt loam soil. Change in 12/13C-CH4 concentrations (as indicative of 13C-CH4 oxidation rates) and production of 13C-CO2 were monitored over the first 72 h after addition of 1.7 ??l 13C-CH4 l?1 (10 at.% excess 13C) to these N treatments. Oxidation of applied 13C-CH4 was slower in the 5, 10, 20 and 30 g N m?2 (5 at.% excess 15N) treatments (0.24?C0.32 ??g 13C-CH4 l?1 day?1) than in the control (0.40 ??g 13C-CH4 l?1 day?1), suggesting that these N loadings inhibited oxidation. N2O production was raised after N addition, and in the 10, 20 and 30 g N m?2 treatments nitrification was the predominant source of N2O accounting for 61, 83 and 57% of the total 15N-N2O produced, respectively. Our results point towards the possibility of methylotrophs switching function to oxidise ammonia in the presence of N, which may result in greater atmospheric loading of both CH4 and N2O.  相似文献   

3.
Production and accumulation of nitrous oxide (N2O), a major greenhouse gas, in shallow groundwater might contribute to indirect N2O emissions to the atmosphere (e.g., when groundwater flows into a stream or a river). The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has attributed an emission factor (EF5g) for N2O, associated with nitrate leaching in groundwater and drainage ditches—0.0025 (corresponding to 0.25% of N leached which is emitted as N2O)—although this is the subject of considerable uncertainty. We investigated and quantified the transport and fate of nitrate (NO3 ?) and dissolved nitrous oxide from crop fields to groundwater and surface water over a 2-year period (monitoring from April 2008 to April 2010) in a transect from a plateau to the river with three piezometers. In groundwater, nitrate concentrations ranged from 1.0 to 22.7 mg NO3 ?–N l?1 (from 2.8 to 37.5 mg NO3 ?–N l?1 in the river) and dissolved N2O from 0.2 to 101.0 μg N2O–N l?1 (and from 0.2 to 2.9 μg N2O–N l?1 in the river). From these measurements, we estimated an emission factor of EF5g = 0.0026 (similar to the value currently used by the IPCC) and an annual indirect N2O flux from groundwater of 0.035 kg N2O–N ha?1 year?1, i.e., 1.8% of the previously measured direct N2O flux from agricultural soils.  相似文献   

4.
Litter inputs are expected to have a strong impact on soil N2O efflux. This study aimed to assess the effects of the litter decomposition process and nutrient efflux from litter to soil on soil N2O efflux in a tropical rainforest. A paired study with a control (L) treatment and a litter-removed (NL) treatment was followed for 2 years, continuously monitoring the effects of these treatments on soil N2O efflux, fresh litter input, decomposed litter carbon (LCI) and nitrogen (LNI), soil nitrate (NO3 ?–N), ammonium (NH4 +–N), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and dissolved nitrogen (DN). Soil N2O flux was 0.48 and 0.32 kg N2O–N ha?1 year?1 for the L and NL treatments, respectively. Removing the litter caused a decrease in the annual soil N2O emission by 33%. The flux values from the litter layer were higher in the rainy season as compared to the dry season (2.10 ± 0.28 vs. 1.44 ± 0.35 μg N m?2 h?1). The N2O fluxes were significantly correlated with the soil NO3 ?–N contents (P < 0.05), indicating that the N2O emission was derived mainly from denitrification as well as other NO3 ? reduction processes. Suitable soil temperature and moisture sustained by rainfall were jointly attributed to the higher soil N2O fluxes of both treatments in the rainy season. The N2O fluxes from the L were mainly regulated by LCI, whereas those from the NL were dominated jointly by soil NO3 ? content and temperature. The effects of LCI and LNI on the soil N2O fluxes were the greatest in the 2 months after litter decomposition. Our results show that litter may affect not only the variability in the quantity of N2O emitted, but also the mechanisms that govern N2O production. However, further studies are still required to elucidate the impacting mechanisms of litter decomposition on N2O emission from tropical forests.  相似文献   

5.
The extent to which in-stream processes alter or remove nutrient loads in agriculturally impacted streams is critically important to watershed function and the delivery of those loads to coastal waters. In this study, patch-scale rates of in-stream benthic processes were determined using large volume, open-bottom benthic incubation chambers in a nitrate-rich, first to third order stream draining an area dominated by tile-drained row-crop fields. The chambers were fitted with sampling/mixing ports, a volume compensation bladder, and porewater samplers. Incubations were conducted with added tracers (NaBr and either 15N[NO3 ?], 15N[NO2 ?], or 15N[NH4 +]) for 24–44 h intervals and reaction rates were determined from changes in concentrations and isotopic compositions of nitrate, nitrite, ammonium and nitrogen gas. Overall, nitrate loss rates (220–3,560 μmol N m?2 h?1) greatly exceeded corresponding denitrification rates (34–212 μmol N m?2 h?1) and both of these rates were correlated with nitrate concentrations (90–1,330 μM), which could be readily manipulated with addition experiments. Chamber estimates closely matched whole-stream rates of denitrification and nitrate loss using 15N. Chamber incubations with acetylene indicated that coupled nitrification/denitrification was not a major source of N2 production at ambient nitrate concentrations (175 μM), but acetylene was not effective for assessing denitrification at higher nitrate concentrations (1,330 μM). Ammonium uptake rates greatly exceeded nitrification rates, which were relatively low even with added ammonium (3.5 μmol N m?2 h?1), though incubations with nitrite demonstrated that oxidation to nitrate exceeded reduction to nitrogen gas in the surface sediments by fivefold to tenfold. The chamber results confirmed earlier studies that denitrification was a substantial nitrate sink in this stream, but they also indicated that dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) turnover rates greatly exceeded the rates of permanent nitrogen removal via denitrification.  相似文献   

6.
Atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition is rapidly increasing in tropical regions. We investigated how a decade of experimental N addition (125 kg N ha?1 year?1) to a seasonal lowland forest affected depth distribution and contents of soil nitrous oxide (N2O), carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4), as well as natural abundance isotopic signatures of N2O, nitrate (NO3 ?) and ammonium (NH4 +). In the control plots during dry season, we deduced limited N2O production by denitrification in the topsoil (0.05–0.40 m) as indicated by: ambient N2O concentrations and ambient 15N-N2O signatures, low water-filled pore space (35–60%), and similar 15N signatures of N2O and NO3 ?. In the subsoil (0.40–2.00 m), we detected evidence of N2O reduction to N2 during upward diffusion, indicating denitrification activity. During wet season, we found that N2O at 0.05–2.00 m was mainly produced by denitrification with substantial further reduction to N2, as indicated by: lighter 15N-N2O than 15N-NO3 ? throughout the profile, and increasing N2O concentrations with simultaneously decreasing 15N-N2O enrichment with depth. These interpretations were supported by an isotopomer map and by a positive correlation between 18O-N2O and 15N-N2O site preferences. Long-term N addition did not affect dry-season soil N2O-N contents, doubled wet-season soil N2O-N contents, did not affect 15N signatures of NO3 ?, and reduced wet-season 15N signatures of N2O compared to the control plots. These suggest that the increased NO3 ? concentrations have stimulated N2O production and decreased N2O-to-N2 reduction. Soil CO2-C contents did not differ between treatments, implying that N addition essentially did not influence soil C cycling. The pronounced seasonality in soil respiration was largely attributable to enhanced topsoil respiration as indicated by a wet-season increase in the topsoil CO2-C contents. The N-addition plots showed reduced dry-season soil CH4-C contents and threshold CH4 concentrations were reached at a shallower depth compared to the control plots, revealing an N-induced stimulation of methanotrophic activity. However, the net soil CH4 uptake rates remained similar between treatments possibly because diffusive CH4 supply from the atmosphere largely limited CH4 oxidation.  相似文献   

7.
Recent identification of the widespread distribution of legacy sediments deposited in historic mill ponds has increased concern regarding their role in controlling land–water nutrient transfers in the mid-Atlantic region of the US. At Big Spring Run in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, legacy sediments now overlay a buried relict hydric soil (a former wetland soil). We compared C and N processing in legacy sediment to upland soils to identify soil zones that may be sources or sinks for N transported toward streams. We hypothesized that legacy sediments would have high nitrification rates (due to recent agricultural N inputs), while relict hydric soils buried beneath the legacy sediments would be N sinks revealed via negative net nitrification and/or positive denitrification (because the buried former wetland soils are C rich but low in O2). Potential net nitrification ranged from 9.2 to 77.9 g m?2 year?1 and potential C mineralization ranged from 223 to 1,737 g m?2 year?1, with the highest rates in surface soils for both legacy sediments and uplands. Potential denitrification ranged from 0.37 to 21.72 g m?2 year?1, with the buried relict hydric soils denitrifying an average of 6.2 g m?2 year?1. Contrary to our hypothesis, relict hydric layers did not have negative potential nitrification or high positive potential denitrification rates, in part because microbial activity was low relative to surface soils, as indicated by low nitrifier population activity, low substrate induced respiration, and low exoenzyme activity. Despite high soil C concentrations, buried relict hydric soils do not provide the ecological services expected from a wetland soil. Thus, legacy sediments may dampen N removal pathways in buried relict hydric soils, while also acting as substantial sources of NO3 ? to waterways.  相似文献   

8.
Whole-tree forest harvest can increase soil nitrous oxide (N2O) effluxes and leaching of nitrogen (N) from soils. These altered N dynamics are often linked to harvesting effects on microclimate, suggesting that this “hot moment” for N cycling may become hotter with climate change. We hypothesized that increases in temperature and precipitation during this post-harvest period would increase availability of soil mineral N and soil-atmosphere N2O efflux. To test this hypothesis we implemented a climate manipulation experiment after a forest harvest, and measured soil N2O fluxes and inorganic N accumulating on ion exchange resins. Climate treatments were: control (A, ambient), heated (H, +2.5 °C), wetted (W, +23 % precipitation), and a two-factor treatment (H+W). For all treatments, the first year after harvest had highest N2O efflux and resin N. Wetting significantly increased cumulative soil N2O fluxes, but only when soils were not heated too. The cumulative soil-to-atmosphere N2O efflux from W (5.8 mg N2O–N m?2) was significantly higher than A (?1.9 mg N2O–N m?2), but H+W (~0 mg N2O–N m?2) was similar to A. Regardless of wetting, heating increased resin N, but only on certain dates. Cumulative resin N was on average 125 % greater in the H plots than non-heated plots. Thus, changes in temperature and precipitation each impart distinct changes to the soil N cycle. Heating increased resin N regardless of water inputs, while wetting increasing N2O but not when combined with heating. Our results suggest that climate change may exacerbate soil N losses from whole-tree harvest in the future, but the form and quantity of N loss will depend on how the future climate changes.  相似文献   

9.

Background and aims

The direct measurement of denitrification dynamics and its product fractions is important for parameterizing process-oriented model(s) for nitrogen cycling in various soils. The aims of this study are to a) directly measure the denitrification potential and the fractions of nitrogenous gases as products of the process in laboratory, b) investigate the effects of the nitrate (NO 3 ? ) concentration on emissions of denitrification gases, and c) test the hypothesis that denitrification can be a major pathway of nitrous oxide (N2O) and nitric oxide (NO) production in calcic cambisols under conditions of simultaneously sufficient supplies of carbon and nitrogen substrates and anaerobiosis as to be found to occur commonly in agricultural lands.

Methods

Using the helium atmosphere (with or without oxygen) gas-flow-soil-core technique in laboratory, we directly measured the denitrification potential of a silt clay calcic cambisol and the production of nitrogen gas (N2), N2O and NO during denitrification under the conditions of seven levels of NO 3 ? concentrations (ranging from 10 to 250 mg N kg?1 dry soil) and an almost constant initial dissolved organic carbon concentration (300 mg C kg?1 dry soil).

Results

Almost all the soil NO 3 ? was consumed during anaerobic incubation, with 80–88 % of the consumed NO 3 ? recovered by measuring nitrogenous gases. The results showed that the increases in initial NO 3 ? concentrations significantly enhanced the denitrification potential and the emissions of N2 and N2O as products of this process. Despite the wide range of initial NO 3 ? concentrations, the ratios of N2, N2O and NO products to denitrification potential showed much narrower ranges of 51–78 % for N2, 14–36 % for N2O and 5–22 % for NO.

Conclusions

These results well support the above hypothesis and provide some parameters for simulating effects of variable soil NO 3 ? concentrations on denitrification process as needed for biogeochemical models.  相似文献   

10.
Recent observations indicate that long-term N additions can slow decomposition, leading to C accumulation in soils, but this process has received limited consideration by models. To address this, we developed a model of soil organic matter (SOM) dynamics to be used with the PnET model and applied it to simulate N addition effects on soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks. We developed the model’s SOC turnover times and responses to experimental N additions using measurements from the Harvard Forest, Massachusetts. We compared model outcomes to SOC stocks measured during the 20th year of the Harvard Forest Chronic Nitrogen Amendment Study, which includes control, low (5 g N m?2 yr?1) and high (15 g N m?2 yr?1) N addition to hardwood and red pine stands. For unfertilized stands, simulated SOC stocks were within 10 % of measurements. Simulations that used measured changes in decomposition rates in response to N accurately captured SOC stocks in the hardwood low N and pine high N treatment, but greatly underestimated SOC stocks in the hardwood high N and the pine low N treatments. Simulated total SOC response to experimental N addition resulted in accumulation of 5.3–7.9 kg C per kg N following N addition at 5 g N m?2 yr?1 and 4.1–5.3 kg C per kg N following N addition at 15 g N m?2 yr?1. Model simulations suggested that ambient atmospheric N deposition at the Harvard Forest (currently 0.8 g N m?2 yr?1) has led to an increase in cumulative O, A, and B horizons C stocks of 211 g C m?2 (3.9 kg C per kg N) and 114 g C m?2 (2.1 kg C per kg N) for hardwood and pine stands, respectively. Simulated SOC accumulation is primarily driven by the modeled decrease in SOM decomposition in the Oa horizon.  相似文献   

11.
The rapid expansion of intensively farmed vegetable fields has substantially contributed to the total N2O emissions from croplands in China. However, to date, the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon have not been completely understood. To quantify the contributions of autotrophic nitrification, heterotrophic nitrification, and denitrification to N2O production from the intensive vegetable fields and to identify the affecting factors, a 15N tracing experiment was conducted using five soil samples collected from adjacent fields used for rice-wheat rotation system (WF), or for consecutive vegetable cultivation (VF) for 0.5 (VF1), 6 (VF2), 8 (VF3), and 10 (VF4) years. Soil was incubated under 50% water holding capacity (WHC) at 25°C for 96 h after being labeled with 15NH4NO3 or NH 4 15 NO3. The average N2O emission rate was 24.2 ng N?kg?1 h?1 in WF soil, but it ranged from 69.6 to 507 ng N?kg?1 h?1 in VF soils. Autotrophic nitrification, heterotrophic nitrification and denitrification accounted for 0.3–31.4%, 25.4–54.4% and 22.5–57.7% of the N2O emissions, respectively. When vegetable soils were moderately acidified (pH, 6.2 to ?≥?5.7), the increased N2O emissions resulted from the increase of both the gross autotrophic and heterotrophic nitrification rates and the N2O product ratio of autotrophic nitrification. However, once severe acidification occurred (as in VF4, pH?≤?4.3) and salt stress increased, both autotrophic and heterotrophic nitrification rates were inhibited to levels similar to those of WF soil. The enhanced N2O product ratios of heterotrophic nitrification (4.84‰), autotrophic nitrification (0.93‰) and denitrification processes were the most important factors explaining high N2O emission in VF4 soil. Data from this study showed that various soil conditions (e.g., soil salinity and concentration of NO 3 - or NH 4 + ) could also significantly affect the sources and rates of N2O emission.  相似文献   

12.
Over the past three decades, Narragansett Bay has undergone various ecological changes, including significant decreases in water column chlorophyll a concentrations, benthic oxygen uptake, and benthic nutrient regeneration rates. To add to this portrait of change, we measured the net flux of N2 across the sediment–water interface over an annual cycle using the N2/Ar technique at seven sites in the bay for comparison with measurements made decades ago. Net denitrification rates ranged from about 10–90 μmol N2–N m?2 h?1 over the year. Denitrification rates were not significantly different among sites and had no clear correlation with temperature. Net nitrogen fixation (?5 to ?650 μmol N2–N m?2 h?1) was measured at three sites and only observed in summer (June–August). Neither denitrification nor nitrogen fixation exhibited a consistent relationship with sediment oxygen demand or with fluxes of nitrite, nitrate, ammonium, total dissolved inorganic nitrogen, or dissolved inorganic phosphate across all stations. In contrast to the mid-bay historical site where denitrification rates have declined, denitrification rates in the Providence River Estuary have not changed significantly over the past 30 years.  相似文献   

13.
Rapid immobilization of inorganic nitrogen (N) in soil contributes to ecosystem N accumulation, even in old-growth and chronically-fertilized forests once thought to have poor N retention capacity. In old-growth conifer and hardwood stands in Pennsylvania, we tested the hypotheses that biotic and abiotic N immobilization are regulated by N form and forest type. We added 15NH4 +, 15NO2 ?, and 15NO3 ? to sterile (γ-irradiated) and live organic-horizon soil and define N immobilization as the mass of added 15N remaining in soil following extractions conducted 15 min, 24 h, and 21 days later. Immobilization of NO2 ? (19–25% of added N) occurred in sterile soils within 15 min and was little changed thereafter. Tracer NO3 ? immobilization was not observed, although soils had been pretreated (refrigerated) so as to quantify the lower limit of immobilization potential. Immobilization of NH4 + (27%) occurred in live conifer soils by 21 days but not in other treatments. In 21-day incubations, tracer N immobilization was greater in NO3 ?-poor and humic-rich soils. Immobilization was greater in sterile than in live soil, perhaps owing to artifacts of sterilization. Conifer stands exhibited more massive O-horizons, so NO2 ? immobilization per unit area was greater in conifer (1.46 mg N m?2) than hardwood (0.43 mg N m?2) stands, possibly accounting for lower N leaching from conifer forests. Areal immobilization rates appear to be fast enough to retain all N transformed to NO2 ?, so NO2 ? production may be a limiting step in soil N retention in old-growth ecosystems.  相似文献   

14.

Background

Although plant growth in alpine steppes on the Tibetan Plateau has been suggested to be sensitive to nitrogen (N) addition, the N limitation conditions of alpine steppes remain uncertain.

Methods

After 2 years of fertilization with NH4NO3 at six rates (0, 10, 20, 40, 80 and 160 kg N ha?1 yr?1), the responses of plant and soil parameters as well as N2O fluxes were measured.

Results

At the vegetation level, N addition resulted in an increase in the aboveground N pool from 0.5?±?0.1 g m?2 in the control plots to 1.9?±?0.2 g m?2 in the plots at the highest N input rate. The aboveground C pool, biomass N concentration, foliar δ15N, soil NO3 ?-N and N2O flux were also increased by N addition. However, as the N fertilization rate increased from 10 kg N ha?1 yr?1 to 160 kg N ha?1 yr?1, the N-use efficiency decreased from 12.3?±?4.6 kg C kg N?1 to 1.6?±?0.2 kg C kg N?1, and the N-uptake efficiency decreased from 43.2?±?9.7 % to 9.1?±?1.1 %. Biomass N:P ratios increased from 14.4?±?2.6 in the control plots to 20.5?±?0.8 in the plots with the highest N input rate. Biomass N:P ratios, N-uptake efficiency and N-use efficiency flattened out at 40 kg N ha?1 yr?1. Above this level, soil NO3 ?-N began to accumulate. The seasonal average N2O flux of growing season nonlinearly increased with increased N fertilization rate and linearly increased with the weighted average foliar δ15N. At the species level, N uptake responses to relative N availability were species-specific. Biomass N concentration of seven out of the eight non-legume species increased significantly with N fertilization rates, while Kobresia macrantha and the one legume species (Oxytropics glacialis) remained stable. Both the non-legume and the legume species showed significant 15N enrichment with increasing N fertilization rate. All non-legume species showed significant increased N:P ratios with increased N fertilization rate, but not the legume species.

Conclusions

Our findings suggest that the Tibetan alpine steppes might be N-saturated above a critical N load of 40 kg N ha?1 yr?1. For the entire Tibetan Plateau (ca. 2.57 million km2), a low N deposition rate (10 kg N ha?1 yr?1) could enhance plant growth, and stimulate aboveground N and C storage by at least 1.1?±?0.3 Tg N yr?1 and 31.5?±?11.8 Tg C yr?1, respectively. The non-legume species was N-limited, but the legume species was not limited by N.  相似文献   

15.
The aims of this study were to simulate wet deposition of atmospheric nitrate (NO3?) onto forest soils and trace its fate via conversion spatially and temporally into gaseous products nitrous oxide (N2O) and dinitrogen (N2). The most likely mechanism is microbial denitrification, but an intermediate product nitrite (NO2?) can fuel N2O production via a chemical pathway involving reactions with iron and/or organic matter referred to as chemodenitrification. During summer months, we applied tracer amounts of 15N-labeled NO3? onto forest soils (pH ~ 4) at three sites in the White Mountain Region of New Hampshire, USA. We recovered 15N as N2O in 210 of 504 measurements (42%) versus 15N as N2 in 51 of 504 measurements (10%), suggesting partial microbial denitrification and/or chemodenitrification. When recovery occurred, the mean percent recovery of added 15N was just 1.1% as N2O, although N2 recovery was 33%. A site with old-growth trees had a larger percentage recovery as N2 (48%), whereas a site that had burned 100 years ago had a small percentage recovery as N2O (0.24%). The 15N composition of N2O in ambient air, collected before addition of the label, was markedly enriched in 15N. Since flux measurements were made 2 h after the addition, the results suggest that denitrification enzymes and conditions for chemodenitrification are present throughout the summer months but account for small amounts of NO3? conversion into N2O and N2.  相似文献   

16.
Human activities have substantially enhanced the availability of important nutrient elements such as nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) in ecosystems worldwide. However, how the concurrent increase in all of these nutrients will affect greenhouse gas (that is, CO2, N2O, CH4) levels remains unknown. In a temperate steppe of northern China, a 2-year field experiment was conducted to examine the effects of multi-nutrient additions on GHG fluxes from 2009 to 2010. Four levels of annual nutrient loads were mimicked: 0 g NPK (control), 15.5 g P m?2 and 19.5 g K m?2 as KH2PO4 (PK), 10 g N m?2 as NH4NO3 plus PK (10N + PK), and 20 g N m?2 plus PK (20N + PK) per year. The results show that multi-nutrient additions led to significant increases in net primary production (NPP) and soil temperature (ST), a significant decrease in soil moisture (SM) in 2010, and no significant changes in other soil parameters. Seasonal patterns differed greatly for different GHG fluxes in response to different nutrient treatments, largely as a result of differences in influential factors. The 10N + PK treatment significantly increased CO2 uptake, whereas the 20N + PK treatment significantly decreased CO2 uptake. The application of P and K without additional N significantly enhanced CH4 uptake, whereas the two N + PK treatments significantly enhanced N2O emissions. Significant positive, linear relationships were found between cumulative CO2 uptake and soil total nitrogen (TN), microbial biomass carbon, and microbial biomass nitrogen, whereas significant negative, linear relationships were found with NPP, SM, and the C/N ratio. Significant positive, linear relationships were found between cumulative N2O emission and ST, TN, NPP, and total organic carbon, whereas no relationships were found between cumulative CH4 uptake and any soil parameters. CO2 flux was related to N2O flux temporally, to a certain extent, for all the treatments. In the control, N2O flux showed a negative, linear relationship with CH4 flux, whereas no regular relationships were detected between CO2 and CH4 fluxes in any treatment. Our findings imply that increasing nutrient deposition will change the magnitude, patterns, and relationships among GHG uptakes and emissions in the future.  相似文献   

17.
Wetlands are biogeochemical hotspots that have been identified as important sites for both nitrogen (N) removal from surface waters and greenhouse gas (GHG) production. Floating vegetation (FV) commonly occurs in natural and constructed wetlands, but the effects of such vegetation on denitrification, N retention, and GHG production are unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we used microcosm experiments to examine how FV affects N and GHG dynamics. Denitrification and N retention rates were significantly higher in microcosms with FV (302 μmol N m?2 h?1 and 203 μmol N m?2 h?1, respectively) than in those without (63 μmol N m?2 h?1 and 170 μmol N m?2 h?1, respectively). GHG production rates were not significantly different between the two treatments. Denitrification rates were likely elevated due to decreased dissolved oxygen (DO) in microcosms with FV. The balance of photosynthesis and respiration was more important in affecting DO concentrations than decreased surface gas exchange. The denitrification fraction (N2-N production: N retention) was higher in microcosms with FV (100 %) than those without (33 %) under increased (tripled) N loading. A 5 °C temperature increase resulted in significantly lower denitrification rates in the absence of FV and significantly lowered N2O production with FV, but did not significantly change CH4 production or N retention in either treatment. These results suggest that intentional introduction of FV in constructed wetlands could enhance N removal while leaving GHG production unchanged, an insight that should be further tested via in situ experiments.  相似文献   

18.
Benthic biogeochemistry and macrofauna were investigated six times over 1 year in a shallow sub-tropical embayment. Benthic fluxes of oxygen (annual mean ?918 μmol O2 m?2 h?1), ammonium (NH4 +), nitrate (NO3 ?), dissolved organic nitrogen, dinitrogen gas (N2), and dissolved inorganic phosphorus were positively related to OM supply (N mineralisation) and inversely related to benthic light (N assimilation). Ammonium (NH4 +), NO3 ? and N2 fluxes (annual means +14.6, +15.9 and 44.6 μmol N m?2 h?1) accounted for 14, 16 and 53 % of the annual benthic N remineralisation respectively. Denitrification was dominated by coupled nitrification–denitrification throughout the study. Potential assimilation of nitrogen by benthic microalgae (BMA) accounted for between 1 and 30 % of remineralised N, and was greatest during winter when bottom light was higher. Macrofauna biomass tended to be highest at intermediate benthic respiration rates (?1,000 μmol O2 m?2 h?1), and appeared to become limited as respiration increased above this point. While bioturbation did not significantly affect net fluxes, macrofauna biomass was correlated with increased light rates of NH4 + flux which may have masked reductions in NH4 + flux associated with BMA assimilation during the light. Peaks in net N2 fluxes at intermediate respiration rates are suggested to be associated with the stimulation of potential denitrification sites due to bioturbation by burrowing macrofauna. NO3 ? fluxes suggest that nitrification was not significantly limited within respiration range measured during this study, however comparisons with other parts of Moreton Bay suggest that limitation of coupled nitrification–denitrification may occur in sub-tropical systems at respiration rates exceeding ?1,500 μmol O2 m?2 h?1.  相似文献   

19.
Rice is staple food of half of mankind and paddy soils account for the largest anthropogenic wetlands on earth. Ample of research is being done to find cultivation methods under which the integrative greenhouse effect caused by emitted CH4 and N2O would be mitigated. Whereas most of the research focuses on quantifying such emissions, there is a lack of studies on the biogeochemistry of paddy soils. In order to deepen our mechanistic understanding of N2O and CH4 fluxes in rice paddies, we also determined NO3 ? and N2O concentrations as well as N2O isotope abundances and presence of O2 along soil profiles of paddies which underwent three different water managements during the rice growing season(s) in (2010 and) 2011 in Korea. Largest amounts of N2O (2 mmol m?2) and CH4 (14.5 mol m?2) degassed from the continuously flooded paddy, while paddies with less flooding showed 30–60 % less CH4 emissions and very low to negative N2O balances. In accordance, the global warming potential (GWP) was lowest for the Intermittent Irrigation paddy and highest for the Traditional Irrigation paddy. The N2O emissions could the best be explained (*P < 0.05) with the δ15N values and N2O concentrations in 40–50 cm soil depth, implying that major N2O production/consumption occurs there. No significant effect of NO3 ? on N2O production has been found. Our study gives insight into the soil of a rice paddy and reveals areas along the soil profile where N2O is being produced. Thereby it contributes to our understanding of subsoil processes of paddy soils.  相似文献   

20.
Understanding spatial variability of emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O) is essential to understanding of N2O emissions from soils to the atmosphere and in the design of statistically valid measurement programs to determine plot, farm and regional emission rates. Two afternoon, ‘snap-shot’ experiments were conducted; one in the summer and one in the autumn of 2004, to examine the statistics and soil variables affecting the spatial variability of N2O emissions at paddock scale. Small, static chambers (mini-chambers) were placed at 100 locations over an 8,100 m2 area of irrigated dairy pasture in northern Victoria, Australia. Chamber headspace was sampled for N2O and soil samples taken below each mini-chamber were analysed for soil nitrate (NO3 -), ammonium (NH4 +) and other chemical and physical properties known to affect N2O emissions. The experiments took place immediately after the sequence of grazing, urea application and irrigation. Nitrous oxide emissions and soil variables were analysed using classical statistics to investigate the effect of soil variables on N2O emissions. Geostatistics were used to investigate spatial patterns of N2O emissions and soil variables over the measurement area. Nitrous oxide emissions were extremely variable; 45–765 ng N2O–N m?2 s?1 and 20–953 ng N2O–N m?2 s?1 for the two experiments with corresponding averages of 165 and 138 ng N2O–N m?2 s?1. Nitrous oxide emissions showed spatial dependence up to 73 and 51 m for the two experiments. Nitrous oxide emissions showed significant correlation with soil nutrients in decreasing order of NO3 -, NH4 + and available-P concentrations. There was no significant correlation of N2O emissions with measured soil physical properties.  相似文献   

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