稻草
氮气
肥料
一氧化二氮
化学
人类受精
生物量(生态学)
农学
环境科学
动物科学
生物
有机化学
作者
Xin Ye,Hongyu Ran,Xiao Wang,Guitong Li,Per Ambus,Gang Wang,Kun Zhu
摘要
Abstract The combination of nitrogen (N) fertilization and straw incorporation has complex influences on soil N transformations and derived nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emissions. This study aimed to reveal the coupled effects of straw returning forms and N fertilizer management on soil N 2 O emissions. Here, carbon (C) sources with varied availabilities were supplied by different straw returning forms, including straw, charred straw, and combined application of straw and charred straw. The time gaps between additions of exogenous N and C sources were carried out by managing the timing of N fertilization, including N application simultaneous with or delayed after straw return. Soil N 2 O emissions under different straw returning forms and their response relationships to soil C, N, microbial biomass, as well as soil pH and oxygen (O 2 ) were explored. Co‐application of straw and N fertilizer provided sufficient C and N sources, enhanced the microbial biomass, and consequently increased N 2 O emissions. Delayed N fertilization could decouple the response of N 2 O emissions to straw addition, because of constrained N availability and limited pH decline, which decreased the cumulative N 2 O emissions significantly. Possibly due to straw induced N immobilization coupled with charred straw induced pH elevation, the combined application of straw and charred straw constrained soil N 2 O emissions compared with straw only application, regardless of N fertilizer management. By shaping the microbial biomass and soil C, N, and O 2 dynamics, delayed application of N fertilizer could further enhance the inhibition effect of the charred straw and straw combination on soil N 2 O emissions. Therefore, the varied straw returning forms and the timing of N fertilization could affect the supply of available C and N, influencing the hot moments of N 2 O emissions, and the joint addition of straw and charred straw with a few weeks delayed N application could possibly reduce the risk of soil N 2 O emissions from straw return systems. Such mitigation potential should be evaluated further under field conditions. Highlights Delayed N fertilization attenuated the magnitude of N 2 O emissions after straw additions. Combination of charred straw with straw mitigated N 2 O emissions, further enhanced by delayed N fertilization. Soil pH was the chief regulator for N 2 O emissions under different straw returning forms and N application.
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