Premium
Primed N 2 O emission from native soil nitrogen: A 15 N‐tracing laboratory experiment
Author(s) -
Schleusner Philipp,
Lammirato Carlo,
Tierling Jens,
Lebender Ulrike,
Rütting Tobias
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of plant nutrition and soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.644
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1522-2624
pISSN - 1436-8730
DOI - 10.1002/jpln.201700312
Subject(s) - fertilizer , nitrogen , chemistry , soil water , manure , agronomy , soil organic matter , environmental science , soil science , biology , organic chemistry
Soils can naturally be a source of the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N 2 O). By contrast, the largest anthropogenic source of N 2 O is the application of nitrogen (N) fertilizer on agricultural soil, but it is unclear if fertilizer‐supported N 2 O emission only originates from the fertilizer N directly or through additionally stimulated N 2 O production from native soil N. Even though native soil N also includes mineral N already in soil before fertilizer application, organic N is the principal native N pool and thereby provides for mineral N cycling and N 2 O emission. Here, we tested (1) the contribution of native soil N to N 2 O emission after mineral N fertilizer application and (2) whether it is affected by different soil organic matter (SOM) contents by conducting a laboratory 15 N‐tracing experiment with agricultural soil from a long‐term field trial with two treatments. Both field treatments are fertilized with mineral N, whereas only one of the two receives liquid manure causing higher SOM content. Soil sampling was conducted in March 2016 shortly before fertilizer application in the field. The application of 15 N‐labeled fertilizer more than doubled the N 2 O production from native N sources compared to the non‐fertilized control incubations. This primed N 2 O production contributed by 5–8% to the fertilizer‐induced N 2 O emission after one week of incubation and was similar for both field treatments regardless of liquid manure application. Therefore, further research is needed to link N 2 O priming to its potential production pathways and sources. While the observed effect may be important in soils, the amount of applied N fertilizer remains the largest concern being responsible for the majority of N 2 O emission.