Title of article :
Nitrite intensity explains N management effects on N2O emissions in maize
Author/Authors :
Maharjan، نويسنده , , Bijesh and Venterea، نويسنده , , Rodney T.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
10
From page :
229
To page :
238
Abstract :
It is typically assumed that the dependence of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions on soil nitrogen (N) availability is best quantified in terms of ammonium ( NH 4 + ) and/or nitrate ( NO 3 − ) concentrations. In contrast, nitrite ( NO 2 − ) is seldom measured separately from NO 3 − despite its role as a central substrate in N2O production. We examined the effects of three N fertilizer sources and two placement methods on N2O and N dynamics in maize over two growing seasons. Cumulative N2O emissions were well-correlated with NO 2 − intensity (NO2I) but not with NO 3 − (NO3I) or NH 4 + (NH4I) intensity. By itself, NO2I explained more than 44% of the overall variance in N2O. Treatment effects on N2O and NO2I were similar. When conventional urea (U) was applied using mid-row banding (MRB), both N2O and NO2I increased by a factor of about 2 compared to broadcast/incorporated (BI). When polymer-coated urea (PCU) was the N source, MRB placement increased both N2O and NO2I compared to BI only in the wetter of the two years. When urea with microbial inhibitors (IU) was the N source, N2O and NO2I were lowest across both years and were less affected by placement than U or PCU. A 50/50 mix of IU and U reduced N2O and NO2I compared to U alone, suggesting that a mixed N source may provide an economical N2O mitigation strategy. Our results show that practices which reduce NO 2 − accumulation have the potential to also reduce N2O emissions, and that separate consideration of NO 3 − and NO 2 − dynamics can provide more insight than their combined dynamics as typically quantified.
Keywords :
Nitrogen , Greenhouse gas , nitrous oxide , corn , nitrate , urea , Dicyandiamide
Journal title :
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Record number :
2186233
Link To Document :
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