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1.
In this study, nitrous oxide (N2O) production during biological nutrient removal (BNR) from municipal wastewater was reported to be remarkably reduced by controlling copper ion (Cu2+) concentration. Firstly, it was observed that the addition of Cu2+ (10–100 μg/L) reduced N2O generation by 54.5–73.2 % and improved total nitrogen removal when synthetic wastewater was treated in an anaerobic–aerobic (with low dissolved oxygen) BNR process. Then, the roles of Cu2+ were investigated. The activities of nitrite and nitrous oxide reductases were increased by Cu2+ addition, which accelerated the bio-reductions of both nitrite to nitric oxide (NO 2 ? ?→?NO) and nitrous oxide to nitrogen gas (N2O?→?N2). The quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction assay indicated that Cu2+ addition increased the number of N2O reducing denitrifiers. Further investigation showed that more polyhydoxyalkanoates were utilized in the Cu2+-added system for denitrification. Finally, the feasibility of reducing N2O generation by controlling Cu2+ was examined in two other BNR processes treating real municipal wastewater. As the Cu2+ in municipal wastewater is usually below 10 μg/L, according to this study, the supplement of influent Cu2+ to a concentration of 10–100 μg/L is beneficial to reduce N2O emission and improve nitrogen removal when sludge concentration in the BNR system is around 3,200 mg/L.  相似文献   

2.
《BBA》1986,848(1):1-7
An almost stoichiometric conversion of nitrite to nitrous oxide was observed during the nitrite reduction by Paracoccus denitrificans cells in a medium of pH 6.4. The N2O accumulated in the reaction medium and was decomposed only after nitrite had been consumed; when the pH of the medium was higher than 7.3–7.4, nitrous oxide did not accumulate. The activity of N2O reductase was, in the whole range of pH 6.4–9.2, higher than the activity of NO2 reductase, both activities showing the maximum at the pH higher than 8.0. Using an artificial donor, TMPD plus ascorbate, the maximum activity of NO2 reductase, but not N2O reductase was shifted by about two pH units to acidic region. The activity of nitrite reductase declined in the presence of N2O only at higher pH values. Cytochrome c, as a common electron donor for both N2O and NO2 reductase, was more oxidized at pH < 7.3 in the presence of NO2 than in the presence of N2O, the opposite being true at pH > 7.3. The increased flux of electrons to cytochrome c has for a constant pH value (6.4) no effect on their distribution over NO2 and N2O. The results indicate that the distribution of electrons in the terminal part is determined by the different pH optima for NO2 reductase and N2O reductase, and by a mutual dependence of activities of the two reductases due to the competition for redox equivalents from a substrate.  相似文献   

3.
We have used a quadrupole mass spectrometer with a gas-permeable membrane inlet for continuous measurements of the production of N2O and N2 from nitrate or nitrite by cell suspensions of Paracoccus denitrificans. The use of nitrate and nitrite labeled with 15N was shown to simplify the interpretation of the results when these gases were measured. This approach was used to study the effect of pH on the production of denitrification intermediates from nitrate and nitrite under anoxic conditions. The kinetic patterns observed were quite different at acidic and alkaline pH values. At pH 5.5, first nitrate was converted to nitrite, then nitrite was converted to N2O, and finally N2O was converted to N2. At pH 8.5, nitrate was converted directly to N2, and the intermediates accumulated to only low steady-state concentrations. The sequential usage of nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide observed at pH 5.5 was simulated by using a kinetic model of a branched electron transport chain in which alternative terminal reductases compete for a common reductant.  相似文献   

4.
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a major greenhouse gas, heavily contributing to global warming. N2O is emitted from various sources such as wastewater treatment plants, during the nitrification and denitrification steps. ASM models, which are commonly used in wastewater treatment, usually consider denitrification as a one-step process (NO3 directly reduced to N2) and are as such unable to provide values for intermediate products of the reaction like N2O. In this study, a slightly modified ASM1 model was implemented in the GPS-X™ software to simulate the concentration of such intermediate products (NO2 , NO and N2O) and to estimate the amounts of gaseous N2O emitted by the denitrification stage (12 biofilters) of the Seine-Centre WWTP (SIAAP, Paris). Simulations running on a 1-year period have shown good agreements with measured effluent data for nitrate and nitrite. The calculated mean value for emitted N2O is 4.95 kgN–N2O/day, which stands in the typical range of estimated experimental values of 4–31 kgN–N2O/day. Nitrous oxide emissions are usually not measured on WWTPs and so, as obtained results show, there is a certain potential for using models that quantify those emissions using traditionally measured influent data.  相似文献   

5.
In contrast to most denitrifiers studied so far, Pseudomonas stutzeri TR2 produces low levels of nitrous oxide (N2O) even under aerobic conditions. We compared the denitrification activity of strain TR2 with those of various denitrifiers in an artificial medium that was derived from piggery wastewater. Strain TR2 exhibited strong denitrification activity and produced little N2O under all conditions tested. Its growth rate under denitrifying conditions was near comparable to that under aerobic conditions, showing a sharp contrast to the lower growth rates of other denitrifiers under denitrifying conditions. Strain TR2 was tolerant to toxic nitrite, even utilizing it as a good denitrification substrate. When both nitrite and N2O were present, strain TR2 reduced N2O in preference to nitrite as the denitrification substrate. This bacterial strain was readily able to adapt to denitrifying conditions by expressing the denitrification genes for cytochrome cd1 nitrite reductase (NiR) (nirS) and nitrous oxide reductase (NoS) (nosZ). Interestingly, nosZ was constitutively expressed even under nondenitrifying, aerobic conditions, consistent with our finding that strain TR2 preferred N2O to nitrite. These properties of strain TR2 concerning denitrification are in sharp contrast to those of well-characterized denitrifiers. These results demonstrate that some bacterial species, such as strain TR2, have adopted a strategy for survival by preferring denitrification to oxygen respiration. The bacterium was also shown to contain the potential to reduce N2O emissions when applied to sewage disposal fields.Wastewater treatment processes produce one of the major greenhouse effect gases, nitrous oxide (N2O) (7, 25, 30). The global warming potential of N2O relative to that of carbon dioxide (CO2) is 298 for a 100-year time horizon, and its concentration in the atmosphere continues to increase by about 0.26% per year (9). Nitrogen removal in wastewater treatment plants is essentially based on the activities of nitrifying and denitrifying microorganisms, both of which are inhabitants of activated sludge. Nitrifying bacteria aerobically oxidize ammonium to nitrite (NO2) and nitrate (NO3), which are then reduced anaerobically by denitrifying bacteria to gaseous nitrogen forms, such as N2O and dinitrogen (N2). It has long been known that N2O can be produced during both nitrification and denitrification processes of wastewater treatment (3, 19, 23), but the cause of N2O emission during the nitrification process was not clear. We recently showed, however, using activated sludge grown under conditions that mimicked a piggery wastewater disposal, that N2O emission during the nitrification process depends on denitrification by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (Nitrosomonas) (18). On the other hand, it is believed that denitrifying bacteria produce N2O as a by-product when anaerobiosis is insufficient during the denitrification process, because N2O reductase is the enzyme that is most sensitive to oxygen (6). Piggery wastewater, in particular, contains a high concentration of ammonia, and N2O emission tends to take place during the nitrogen removal process (5, 10). Experiments on the removal of ammonia and organic carbon by the aerobic denitrifier Pseudomonas stutzeri SU2 (24) and the heterotrophic nitrifier-aerobic denitrifier Alcaligenes faecalis no. 4 (16, 17) have been reported as examples of bioaugmentation in piggery wastewater treatment. Reduction of N2O emissions from pig manure compost by addition of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria has also been reported (11). However, there have been no reports of methods for reducing N2O emissions by bioaugmentation using aerobic denitrifying bacteria.Takaya et al. isolated the aerobic denitrifying bacterium Pseudomonas stutzeri TR2 (26). The denitrification activity of strain TR2 was monitored in batch and continuous cultures, using denitrification and artificial wastewater media, and the strain was found to keep a distinct activity (producing N2 from NO3) and to produce a very low level of N2O at a dissolved oxygen (O2) concentration of 1.25 mg liter−1. Therefore, strain TR2 should be useful in the future for reducing N2O emissions from wastewater treatment plants by bioaugmentation. To investigate the feasibility of using strain TR2 for future application to wastewater treatment processes, we examined its denitrification activity, N2O production, growth rate, and expression of denitrifying genes in batch cultures, using a medium that mimics the composition found in nitrogen removal wastewater plants. Comparison of the properties of strain TR2 with those of well-characterized denitrifying bacteria revealed characteristics of the strain that favor denitrification, although it can also respire oxygen.  相似文献   

6.
Arable soil continues to be the dominant anthropogenic source of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions owing to application of nitrogen (N) fertilizers and manures across the world. Using laboratory and in situ studies to elucidate the key factors controlling soil N2O emissions remains challenging due to the potential importance of multiple complex processes. We examined soil surface N2O fluxes in an arable soil, combined with in situ high-frequency measurements of soil matrix oxygen (O2) and N2O concentrations, in situ 15N labeling, and N2O 15N site preference (SP). The in situ O2 concentration and further microcosm visualized spatiotemporal distribution of O2 both suggested that O2 dynamics were the proximal determining factor to matrix N2O concentration and fluxes due to quick O2 depletion after N fertilization. Further SP analysis and in situ 15N labeling experiment revealed that the main source for N2O emissions was bacterial denitrification during the hot-wet summer with lower soil O2 concentration, while nitrification or fungal denitrification contributed about 50.0% to total emissions during the cold-dry winter with higher soil O2 concentration. The robust positive correlation between O2 concentration and SP values underpinned that the O2 dynamics were the key factor to differentiate the composite processes of N2O production in in situ structured soil. Our findings deciphered the complexity of N2O production processes in real field conditions, and suggest that O2 dynamics rather than stimulation of functional gene abundances play a key role in controlling soil N2O production processes in undisturbed structure soils. Our results help to develop targeted N2O mitigation measures and to improve process models for constraining global N2O budget.  相似文献   

7.
The emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O) and nitric oxide (NO) from biological nitrogen removal (BNR) operations via nitrification and denitrification is gaining increased prominence. While many factors relevant to the operation of denitrifying reactors can influence N2O and NO emissions from them, the role of different organic carbon sources on these emissions has not been systematically addressed or interpreted. The overall goal of this study was to evaluate the impact of three factors, organic carbon limitation, nitrite concentrations, and dissolved oxygen concentrations on gaseous N2O and NO emissions from two sequencing batch reactors (SBRs), operated, respectively, with methanol and ethanol as electron donors. During undisturbed ultimate‐state operation, emissions of both N2O and NO from either reactor were minimal and in the range of <0.2% of influent nitrate‐N load. Subsequently, the two reactors were challenged with transient organic carbon limitation and nitrite pulses, both of which had little impact on N2O or NO emissions for either electron donor. In contrast, transient exposure to oxygen led to increased production of N2O (up to 7.1% of influent nitrate‐N load) from ethanol grown cultures, owing to their higher kinetics and potentially lower susceptibility to oxygen inhibition. A similar increase in N2O production was not observed from methanol grown cultures. These results suggest that for dissolved oxygen, but not for carbon limitation or nitrite exposure, N2O emission from heterotrophic denitrification reactors can vary as a function of the electron donor used. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010; 106: 390–398. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Oxidation of ammonia to nitrite by bacteria and archaea is responsible for global emissions of nitrous oxide directly and indirectly through provision of nitrite and, after further oxidation, nitrate to denitrifiers. Their contributions to increasing N2O emissions are greatest in terrestrial environments, due to the dramatic and continuing increases in use of ammonia‐based fertilizers, which have been driven by requirement for increased food production, but which also provide a source of energy for ammonia oxidizers (AO), leading to an imbalance in the terrestrial nitrogen cycle. Direct N2O production by AO results from several metabolic processes, sometimes combined with abiotic reactions. Physiological characteristics, including mechanisms for N2O production, vary within and between ammonia‐oxidizing archaea (AOA) and bacteria (AOB) and comammox bacteria and N2O yield of AOB is higher than in the other two groups. There is also strong evidence for niche differentiation between AOA and AOB with respect to environmental conditions in natural and engineered environments. In particular, AOA are favored by low soil pH and AOA and AOB are, respectively, favored by low rates of ammonium supply, equivalent to application of slow‐release fertilizer, or high rates of supply, equivalent to addition of high concentrations of inorganic ammonium or urea. These differences between AOA and AOB provide the potential for better fertilization strategies that could both increase fertilizer use efficiency and reduce N2O emissions from agricultural soils. This article reviews research on the biochemistry, physiology and ecology of AO and discusses the consequences for AO communities subjected to different agricultural practices and the ways in which this knowledge, coupled with improved methods for characterizing communities, might lead to improved fertilizer use efficiency and mitigation of N2O emissions.  相似文献   

9.
Wastewater treatment plants are known to be important point sources for nitrous oxide (N2O) in the anthropogenic N cycle. Biofilm based treatment systems have gained increasing popularity in the treatment of wastewater, but the mechanisms and controls of N2O formation are not fully understood. Here, we review functional groups of microorganism involved in nitrogen (N) transformations during wastewater treatment, with emphasis on potential mechanism of N2O production in biofilms. Biofilms used in wastewater treatment typically harbour aerobic and anaerobic zones, mediating close interactions between different groups of N transforming organisms. Current models of mass transfer and biomass interactions in biofilms are discussed to illustrate the complex regulation of N2O production. Ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB) are the prime source for N2O in aerobic zones, while heterotrophic denitrifiers dominate N2O production in anoxic zones. Nitrosative stress ensuing from accumulation of NO2 ? during partial nitrification or denitrification seems to be one of the most critical factors for enhanced N2O formation. In AOB, N2O production is coupled to nitrifier denitrification triggered by nitrosative stress, low O2 tension or low pH. Chemical N2O production from AOB intermediates (NH2OH, HNO, NO) released during high NH3 turnover seems to be limited to surface-near AOB clusters, since diffusive mass transport resistance for O2 slows down NH3 oxidation rates in deeper biofilm layers. The proportion of N2O among gaseous intermediates (NO, N2O, N2) in heterotrophic denitrification increases when NO or nitrous acid (HNO2) accumulates because of increasing NO2 ?, or when transient oxygen intrusion impairs complete denitrification. Limited electron donor availability due to mass transport limitation of organic substrates into anoxic biofilm zones is another important factor supporting high N2O/N2 ratios in heterotrophic denitrifiers. Biofilms accommodating Anammox bacteria release less N2O, because Anammox bacteria have no known N2O producing metabolism and reduce NO2 ? to N2, thereby lowering nitrosative stress to AOB and heterotrophs.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrate and nitrite concentrations in the water and nitrous oxide and nitrite fluxes across the sediment-water interface were measured monthly in the River Colne estuary, England, from December 1996 to March 1998. Water column concentrations of N2O in the Colne were supersaturated with respect to air, indicating that the estuary was a source of N2O for the atmosphere. At the freshwater end of the estuary, nitrous oxide effluxes from the sediment were closely correlated with the nitrite concentrations in the overlying water and with the nitrite influx into the sediment. Increases in N2O production from sediments were about 10 times greater with the addition of nitrite than with the addition of nitrate. Rates of denitrification were stimulated to a larger extent by enhanced nitrite than by nitrate concentrations. At 550 μM nitrite or nitrate (the highest concentration used), the rates of denitrification were 600 μmol N · m−2 · h−1 with nitrite but only 180 μmol N · m−2 · h−1 with nitrate. The ratios of rates of nitrous oxide production and denitrification (N2O/N2 × 100) were significantly higher with the addition of nitrite (7 to 13% of denitrification) than with nitrate (2 to 4% of denitrification). The results suggested that in addition to anaerobic bacteria, which possess the complete denitrification pathway for N2 formation in the estuarine sediments, there may be two other groups of bacteria: nitrite denitrifiers, which reduce nitrite to N2 via N2O, and obligate nitrite-denitrifying bacteria, which reduce nitrite to N2O as the end product. Consideration of free-energy changes during N2O formation led to the conclusion that N2O formation using nitrite as the electron acceptor is favored in the Colne estuary and may be a critical factor regulating the formation of N2O in high-nutrient-load estuaries.  相似文献   

11.
Peatlands cover more than 30% of the Finnish land area and impact N2O fluxes. Denitrifiers release N2O as an intermediate or end product. In situ N2O emissions of a near pH neutral pristine fen soil in Finnish Lapland were marginal during gas chamber measurements. However, nitrate and ammonium fertilization significantly stimulated in situ N2O emissions. Stimulation with nitrate was stronger than with ammonium. N2O was produced and subsequently consumed in gas chambers. In unsupplemented anoxic microcosms, fen soil produced N2O only when acetylene was added to block nitrous oxide reductase, suggesting complete denitrification. Nitrate and nitrite stimulated denitrification in fen soil, and maximal reaction velocities (vmax) of nitrate or nitrite dependent denitrification where 18 and 52 nmol N2O h-1 gDW -1, respectively. N2O was below 30% of total produced N gases in fen soil when concentrations of nitrate and nitrite were <500 μM. vmax for N2O consumption was up to 36 nmol N2O h-1 gDW -1. Denitrifier diversity was assessed by analyses of narG, nirK/nirS, and nosZ (encoding nitrate-, nitrite-, and nitrous oxide reductases, respectively) by barcoded amplicon pyrosequencing. Analyses of ~14,000 quality filtered sequences indicated up to 25 species-level operational taxonomic units (OTUs), and up to 359 OTUs at 97% sequence similarity, suggesting diverse denitrifiers. Phylogenetic analyses revealed clusters distantly related to publicly available sequences, suggesting hitherto unknown denitrifiers. Representatives of species-level OTUs were affiliated with sequences of unknown soil bacteria and Actinobacterial, Alpha-, Beta-, Gamma-, and Delta-Proteobacterial sequences. Comparison of the 4 gene markers at 97% similarity indicated a higher diversity of narG than for the other gene markers based on Shannon indices and observed number of OTUs. The collective data indicate (i) a high denitrification and N2O consumption potential, and (ii) a highly diverse, nitrate limited denitrifier community associated with potential N2O fluxes in a pH-neutral fen soil.  相似文献   

12.
Soil emissions are largely responsible for the increase of the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) in the atmosphere and are generally attributed to the activity of nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria. However, the contribution of the recently discovered ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) to N2O production from soil is unclear as is the mechanism by which they produce it. Here we investigate the potential of Nitrososphaera viennensis, the first pure culture of AOA from soil, to produce N2O and compare its activity with that of a marine AOA and an ammonia-oxidizing bacterium (AOB) from soil. N. viennensis produced N2O at a maximum yield of 0.09% N2O per molecule of nitrite under oxic growth conditions. N2O production rates of 4.6±0.6 amol N2O cell−1 h−1 and nitrification rates of 2.6±0.5 fmol NO2 cell−1 h−1 were in the same range as those of the AOB Nitrosospira multiformis and the marine AOA Nitrosopumilus maritimus grown under comparable conditions. In contrast to AOB, however, N2O production of the two archaeal strains did not increase when the oxygen concentration was reduced, suggesting that they are not capable of denitrification. In 15N-labeling experiments we provide evidence that both ammonium and nitrite contribute equally via hybrid N2O formation to the N2O produced by N. viennensis under all conditions tested. Our results suggest that archaea may contribute to N2O production in terrestrial ecosystems, however, they are not capable of nitrifier-denitrification and thus do not produce increasing amounts of the greenhouse gas when oxygen becomes limiting.  相似文献   

13.
Constructed wetlands (CWs) are considered to be important sources of nitrous oxide (N2O). In order to investigate the effect of influent COD/N ratio on N2O emission and control excess emission from nitrogen removal, free water surface microcosm wetlands were used and fed with different influent. In addition, the transformation of nitrogen was examined for better understanding of the mechanism of N2O production under different operating COD/N ratios. It was found that N2O emission and the performance of microcosm wetlands were significantly affected by COD/N ratio of wastewater influent. Strong relationships exist between N2O production rate and nitrite (r = 0.421, p < 0.01). During denitrification process, DO concentration crucially influences N2O production rate. An optimal influent COD/N ratio was obtained by adjusting external carbon sources for most effective N2O emission control and best performance of the CWs in nitrogen removal from wastewater. It is concluded that under the operating condition of COD/N ratio = 5, total N2O emission is minimum and the microcosm wetland is most effective in wastewater nitrogen removal.  相似文献   

14.
Cryoturbated peat circles (that is, bare surface soil mixed by frost action; pH 3–4) in the Russian discontinuous permafrost tundra are nitrate-rich ‘hotspots'' of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions in arctic ecosystems, whereas adjacent unturbated peat areas are not. N2O was produced and subsequently consumed at pH 4 in unsupplemented anoxic microcosms with cryoturbated but not in those with unturbated peat soil. Nitrate, nitrite and acetylene stimulated net N2O production of both soils in anoxic microcosms, indicating denitrification as the source of N2O. Up to 500 and 10 μ nitrate stimulated denitrification in cryoturbated and unturbated peat soils, respectively. Apparent maximal reaction velocities of nitrite-dependent denitrification were 28 and 18 nmol N2O gDW−1 h−1, for cryoturbated and unturbated peat soils, respectively. Barcoded amplicon pyrosequencing of narG, nirK/nirS and nosZ (encoding nitrate, nitrite and N2O reductases, respectively) yielded ≈49 000 quality-filtered sequences with an average sequence length of 444 bp. Up to 19 species-level operational taxonomic units were detected per soil and gene, many of which were distantly related to cultured denitrifiers or environmental sequences. Denitrification-associated gene diversity in cryoturbated and in unturbated peat soils differed. Quantitative PCR (inhibition-corrected per DNA extract) revealed higher copy numbers of narG in cryoturbated than in unturbated peat soil. Copy numbers of nirS were up to 1000 × higher than those of nirK in both soils, and nirS nirK−1 copy number ratios in cryoturbated and unturbated peat soils differed. The collective data indicate that the contrasting N2O emission patterns of cryoturbated and unturbated peat soils are associated with contrasting denitrifier communities.  相似文献   

15.
N2O is a potent greenhouse gas involved in the destruction of the protective ozone layer in the stratosphere and contributing to global warming. The ecological processes regulating its emissions from soil are still poorly understood. Here, we show that the presence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), a dominant group of soil fungi, which form symbiotic associations with the majority of land plants and which influence a range of important ecosystem functions, can induce a reduction in N2O emissions from soil. To test for a functional relationship between AMF and N2O emissions, we manipulated the abundance of AMF in two independent greenhouse experiments using two different approaches (sterilized and re-inoculated soil and non-mycorrhizal tomato mutants) and two different soils. N2O emissions were increased by 42 and 33% in microcosms with reduced AMF abundance compared to microcosms with a well-established AMF community, suggesting that AMF regulate N2O emissions. This could partly be explained by increased N immobilization into microbial or plant biomass, reduced concentrations of mineral soil N as a substrate for N2O emission and altered water relations. Moreover, the abundance of key genes responsible for N2O production (nirK) was negatively and for N2O consumption (nosZ) positively correlated to AMF abundance, indicating that the regulation of N2O emissions is transmitted by AMF-induced changes in the soil microbial community. Our results suggest that the disruption of the AMF symbiosis through intensification of agricultural practices may further contribute to increased N2O emissions.  相似文献   

16.
The loss of nitrogen (N) from field-applied animal manure through ammonia (NH3) volatilisation and nitrous oxide (N2O) emission is of major environmental concern. Both lime and dicyandiamide (DCD) have been suggested as amendments that can mitigate N2O emissions, but simultaneously increase the risk of NH3 volatilisation. This study evaluated the impact of lime and DCD on NH3 and N2O emissions following application of liquid hog manure. Hydrated lime (Ca(OH)2) was added to an acidic soil to achieve three pH levels (4.7, 6.3 and 7.4). Soil samples (100 g) were then placed in 500 ml screw-top Mason-jars and de-ionised water was added to bring the samples to 50, 70 and 90% water-filled pore space (WFPS). Slurry was applied at a rate equivalent to 116,000 l ha−1, while DCD was applied at 30% of the NH4-N rate applied. Jars were sealed and incubated at 21°C for 21 d. Ammonia volatilisation was quantified using boric acid traps, while N2O gas concentration was analysed using gas chromatography. Dicyandiamide had no effect (P>0.05) on either NH3 or N2O emissions. Both NH3 and N2O emissions increased (P<0.05) as WFPS increased, with emissions ranging from 0.9 to 1.4 kg NH3-N ha−1 and 123 to 353 g N2O-N ha−1, respectively. Liming decreased (P<0.01) N2O emissions from 547 to 46 g N2O-N ha−1, but increased (p<0.01) NH3 volatilisation from 0.36 to 1.92 kg NH3-N ha−1. Results suggest that liming to a pH ≥6.3 can reduce N2O emissions, however, this reduction will be accompanied by a substantial loss of NH3. Section Editor: H. Lambers  相似文献   

17.
Species in the Miscanthus genus have been proposed as biofuel crops that have potential to mitigate elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels and nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4) emissions. Miscanthus sinensis is widespread throughout Japan and has been used for biomass production for centuries. We assessed the carbon (C) budget and N2O and CH4 emissions over the growing season for 2 years in a M. sinensis‐dominated grassland that was naturally established around 1972 in Tomakomai, Hokkaido, Japan, which is near the northern limit for M. sinensis grassland establishment on Andisols. Average C budget was ?0.31 Mg C ha?1, which indicates C was released from the grassland ecosystem to the atmosphere. Dominant components in the C budget appeared to be aboveground net primary production of plants (1.94–2.80 Mg C ha?1) and heterotrophic respiration (2.27–3.11 Mg C ha?1). The measurement of belowground net primary production (BNPP) of plants in the M. sinensis grassland was extremely variable, thus only an approximate value could be calculated. Mean C budget calculated with the approximated BNPP value was 1.47 and ?0.23 Mg C ha?1 for 2008 and 2009, respectively. Given belowground biomass (9.46–9.86 Mg C ha?1) was 3.1–6.5 times higher than that of aboveground biomass may provide additional evidence suggesting this grassland represents a C sink. Average CH4 emissions across years of ?1.34 kg C ha?1 would indicate this grassland acts as an atmospheric CH4 sink. Furthermore, average N2O emissions across years were 0.22 kg N ha?1. While the site may contribute N2O to the atmosphere, this value is lower compared with other grassland types. Global warming potential calculated with the approximated BNPP value was ?5.40 and 0.95 Mg CO2 Eq ha?1 for 2008 and 2009, respectively, and indicates this grassland could contribute to mitigation of global warming.  相似文献   

18.
El Niño–La Niña cycles strongly influence dry and wet seasons in the tropics and consequently nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from tropical rainforest soils. We monitored whole‐system and soil chamber N2O fluxes during 5‐month‐long droughts in the Biosphere 2 tropical forest to determine how rainfall changes N2O production. A consistent pattern of N2O flux changes during drought and subsequent wetting emerged from our experiments. Soil surface drying during the first days of drought, presumably increased gas transport out of the soil, which increased N2O fluxes. Subsequent drying caused an exponential decrease in whole‐system (4.0±0.1% day?1) and soil chamber N2O flux (8.9±0.8% day?1; south chamber; and 13.7±1.1% day?1; north chamber), which was highly correlated with soil moisture content. Soil air N2O concentration ([N2O]) and flux measurements revealed that surface N2O production persisted during drought. The first rainfall after drought triggered a N2O pulse, which amounted to 25% of drought‐associated reduction in N2O flux and 1.3±0.4% of annual N2O emissions. Physical displacement of soil air by water and soil chemistry changes during drought could not account for the observed N2O pulse. We contend that osmotic stress on the microbial biomass must have supplied the N source for pulse N2O, which was produced at the litter–soil interface. After the pulse, N2O fluxes were consistently 90% of predrought values. Nitrate change rate, nutrient, [N2O], and flux analyses suggested that nitrifiers dominated N2O production during the pulse and denitrifiers during wet conditions. N2O flux measurements in Biosphere 2, especially during the N2O pulse, demonstrate that large‐scale integration methods, such as flux towers, are essential for improving ecosystem N2O flux estimates.  相似文献   

19.
The mixture of other broadleaf species into beech forests in Central Europe leads to an increase of tree species diversity, which may alter soil biochemical processes. This study was aimed at 1) assessing differences in gross rates of soil N cycling among deciduous stands of different beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) abundance in a limestone area, 2) analyzing the relationships between gross rates of soil N cycling and forest stand N cycling, and 3) quantifying N2O emission and determining its relationship with gross rates of soil N cycling. We used 15N pool dilution techniques for soil N transformation measurement and chamber method for N2O flux measurement. Gross rates of mineral N production in the 0–5 cm mineral soil increased across stands of decreasing beech abundance and increasing soil clay content. These rates were correlated with microbial biomass which, in turn, was influenced by substrate quantity, quality and soil fertility. Leaf litter-N, C:N ratio and base saturation in the mineral soil increased with decreasing beech abundance. Soil mineral N production and assimilation by microbes were tightly coupled, resulting in low N2O emissions. Annual N2O emissions were largely contributed by the freeze-thaw event emissions, which were correlated with the amount of soil microbial biomass. Our results suggest that soil N availability may increase through the mixture of broadleaf species into beech forests.  相似文献   

20.
Outdoor pot and field experiments were conducted to assess the role of growing plants in agricultural ecosystem N2O emissions. N2O emissions from plants were quantified as the difference in soil-crop system N2O emissions before and immediately after cutting plants during the main growth stages in 2001–02 and 2002–03 winter wheat seasons. Emissions of N2O from plants depended on biomass within the same plant developmental status. Field results indicated that the seasonal contribution of N2O emissions from plants to ecosystem fluxes averaged 25%, ranging from 10% at wheat tillering to 62% at the heading stage. The fluxes of N2O emissions from plants varied between 0.3 and 3.9 mg N2O-N m−2 day−1 and its seasonal amount was equivalent to 0.23% of plant N released as N2O. A N2O emission coefficient (N2OE, mg N2O-N g−1 C day−1), defined as N2O-N emission in milligrams from per gram carbon of plant dry matter within a day, was represented by a 5-fold variation ranging from 0.021 to 0.004 mg N2O-N g C−1 day−1. A linear relationship (y=0.4611x+0.0015, r 2=0.9352, p < 0.001) between N2OE (y) and plant dark respiration rate (x, mg CO2-C g C−1 day−1) suggested that in the absence of photosynthesis, some N2O production in plant N assimilation was associated with plant respiration. Although this study could not show whether N2O was produced or transferred by winter wheat plants, these results indicated an important role for higher plant in N2O exchange. Identifying its potential contribution is critical for understanding agricultural ecosystem N2O sources.  相似文献   

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