4.7 Article

Nitrite intensity explains N management effects on N2O emissions in maize

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 66, Issue -, Pages 229-238

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2013.07.015

Keywords

Nitrogen; Nitrous oxide; Greenhouse gas; Corn; Nitrate; Urea; Dicyandiamide

Categories

Funding

  1. USDA CSREES/NIFA Air Quality Program [2009-55112-05216]
  2. International Plant Nutrition Institute's Foundation for Agronomic Research
  3. Agricultural Research Service of the USDA
  4. GRACEnet Project
  5. NIFA [582509, 2009-55112-05216] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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It is typically assumed that the dependence of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions on soil nitrogen (N) availability is best quantified in terms of ammonium (NH4+) and/or nitrate (NO3-) concentrations. In contrast, nitrite (NO2-) is seldom measured separately from NO3- 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 NO2- intensity (NO21) but not with NO3- (NO3I) or NH4+ (NH4I) intensity. By itself, NO21 explained more than 44% of the overall variance in N2O. Treatment effects on N2O and NO21 were similar. When conventional urea (U) was applied using mid-row banding (MRB), both N2O and NO21 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 NO21 compared to BI only in the wetter of the two years. When urea with microbial inhibitors (IU) was the N source, N2O and NO21 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 NO21 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 accumulation have the potential to also reduce N2O emissions, and that separate consideration of NO3- and NO dynamics can provide more insight than their combined dynamics as typically quantified. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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