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Nitrous oxide emissions from cultivated black soil: A case study in Northeast China and global estimates using empirical model

90

Citations

77

References

2014

Year

Abstract

Abstract Manure application is effective in promoting soil carbon sequestration, but its impact on N 2 O emission is not well understood. A field experiment was conducted in a maize‐cultivated black soil in Northeast China with six treatments: inorganic fertilizer (NPK), 75% inorganic fertilizer N plus 25% pig (PM1) or chicken (CM1) manure N, 50% inorganic fertilizer N plus 50% pig (PM2) or chicken (CM2) manure N, and no N fertilizer (CK). Annual N 2 O emission significantly increased from 0.34 kg N ha −1 for CK to 0.86 kg N ha −1 for NPK and further to 1.65, 1.02, 1.17, and 0.93 kg N ha −1 for PM1, CM1, PM2, and CM2, respectively. A 15 N tracing study showed that 71–79% of total N 2 O was related to nitrification at 30–70% water‐filled pore space (WFPS), and heterotrophic nitrification contributed 49% and 25% to total N 2 O at 30% and 70% WFPS, respectively. In an incubation, N 2 O emission was only stimulated when nitrate and glucose were applied together at 60% WFPS, indicating that denitrification was carbon limited. PM had a stronger effect on denitrification than CM due to higher decomposability, and the lower N 2 O emission at higher manure application rate was associated with decreased mineral N supply. After compiling a worldwide database and establishing an empirical model that related N 2 O emissions (kg N ha −1 ) to precipitation ( P r , m) and fertilizer N application rate ( N r , kg N ha −1 ) (N 2 O = 1.533 P r + 0.0238 P r N r ), annual N 2 O emission from global‐cultivated black soil applied with inorganic fertilizer N was estimated as 347 Gg N. Our results suggested that N 2 O emission from cultivated black soils in China was low primarily due to low precipitation and labile organic carbon availability, and would be stimulated by manure application; thus, increased N 2 O emission should be taken into consideration as applying manure increases soil organic carbon sequestration.

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