4.7 Article

Anaerobic soil disinfestation with incorporation of straw and manure significantly increases greenhouse gases emission and reduces nitrate leaching while increasing leaching of dissolved organic N

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 785, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147307

Keywords

Anaerobic soil disinfestation; Nitrogen oxide; Nitrogen leaching; Chicken manure; Solar greenhouse vegetable

Funding

  1. National Nature Sciences Foundation of China [41761134087]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [BU1173/191]

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Greenhouse vegetable production in China often involves excessive use of nitrogen fertilizers and flood irrigation, leading to soil degradation and spread of soil borne diseases. Anaerobic soil disinfestation (ASD) is applied as a countermeasure, but the use of organic C sources and manure in this process can result in significant greenhouse gas emissions and nitrogen leaching. Optimizing irrigation schemes and advising against the use of chicken manure during ASD period can help reduce environmental losses and improve sustainability in greenhouse vegetable production.
Greenhouse vegetable production in China mostly involves excessive N fertilization and flood irrigation. This causes serious soil degradation and spreading of soil borne diseases. As a countermeasure against soil borne diseases anaerobic soil disinfestation (ASD) is applied during the summer fallow period. Current practices involve the incorporation of organic C sources, covering of the soil with plastic film and flood irrigation. However, farmers not only apply straw but also organic manure in ASD which may result in significant greenhouse gas emissions and N leaching. A field experiment was conducted in a greenhouse during the summer fallow period to test the impact of three ASD practices on soil GHG (N2O, CO2 and CH4) emissions and N leaching: 1) control (CK), bare soil, no ASD; 2) ASD without straw incorporation (ASD-S); 3) ASD plus straw incorporation (ASD+S) and 4) ASD plus straw and chicken manure incorporation (ASD+SM). Applying any form of ASD resulted in an increase in N2O emissions from approximately 1 kg N ha(-1) month(-1) to 10.7 (ASD)-47.0 (ASD+SM) kg N ha(-1) month(-1). Furthermore, N leaching from treatments of ASD ranged from 24.1-54.2 kg N ha(-1) month(-1), with highest values in ASD-S. However, while N leaching in ASD-S was solely in the form of NO3-, DON leaching was with approximately 12-20% a significant component of total N leaching in ASD+S and ASD+SM. Overall, ASD +SM showed the highest environmental N losses, which were dominated by N2O emissions. This highlights the need to advise farmers and policy makers to ban the incorporation of chicken manure instead of straw only during the ASD period and to optimize irrigation schemes instead of flood irrigation to reduce environmental N losses. Putting in more environmental sound ASD practices will certainly help to improve the sustainability of greenhouse vegetable production. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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