4.8 Article

Soil pH as the chief modifier for regional nitrous oxide emissions: New evidence and implications for global estimates and mitigation

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages E617-E626

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13966

Keywords

emission factor; environmental factors; greenhouse gas estimate and mitigation; global meta-analysis; nitrous oxide; nonlinearity coefficient; soil pH

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41230856, 40773049]
  2. Norwegian Research Council [209687/E40, 209696/E10]
  3. Chinese Universities Scientific Fund [2015QC077]

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Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a greenhouse gas that also plays the primary role in stratospheric ozone depletion. The use of nitrogen fertilizers is known as the major reason for atmospheric N2O increase. Empirical bottom-up models therefore estimate agricultural N2O inventories using N loading as the sole predictor, disregarding the regional heterogeneities in soil inherent response to external N loading. Several environmental factors have been found to influence the response in soil N2O emission to N fertilization, but their interdependence and relative importance have not been addressed properly. Here, we show that soil pH is the chief factor explaining regional disparities in N2O emission, using a global meta-analysis of 1,104 field measurements. The emission factor (EF) of N2O increases significantly (p < .001) with soil pH decrease. The default EF value of 1.0%, according to IPCC (Intergovernmental Panelon Climate Change) for agricultural soils, occurs at soil pH 6.76. Moreover, changes in EF with N fertilization (i.e. EF) is also negatively correlated (p < .001) with soil pH. This indicates that N2O emission in acidic soils is more sensitive to changing N fertilization than that in alkaline soils. Incorporating our findings into bottom-up models has significant consequences for regional and global N2O emission inventories and reconciling them with those from top-down models. Moreover, our results allow region-specific development of tailor-made N2O mitigation measures in agriculture.

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