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Intensified Precipitation Seasonality Reduces Soil Inorganic N Content in a Subtropical Forest: Greater Contribution of Leaching Loss Than N 2 O Emissions
Author(s) -
Chen Jie,
Kuzyakov Yakov,
Jenerette G. Darrel,
Xiao Guoliang,
Liu Wei,
Wang Zhengfeng,
Shen Weijun
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8961
pISSN - 2169-8953
DOI - 10.1029/2018jg004821
Subject(s) - leaching (pedology) , environmental science , precipitation , seasonality , dry season , wet season , nitrification , irrigation , soil water , growing season , mineralization (soil science) , nitrogen , agronomy , zoology , chemistry , soil science , ecology , geography , biology , organic chemistry , meteorology
Soil nitrogen (N) loss has been predicted to intensify with increased global precipitation changes. However, the relative contributions of leaching and gaseous N emissions to intensified N losses are largely unknown. Thus, we simulated intensified precipitation seasonality in a subtropical forest by extending the dry season via rainfall exclusion and increasing the wet‐season storms via irrigation without changing the total annual precipitation. Extending the dry season length increased the monthly mean soil NO 3 − content by 25%–64%, net N mineralization rate by 32%–40%, and net nitrification rate by 25%–28%. After adding water in the wet season, the monthly NO 3 − leaching was enhanced by 43% in the relatively dry year (2013, 2,094‐mm annual rainfall), but reduced by 51% in the relatively wet year (2014, 1,551 mm). In contrast, the monthly mean N 2 O emissions were reduced by 24% in 2013 but increased by 78% in 2014. Overall, the annual inorganic N content was decreased significantly by the precipitation changes. Decrease of soil inorganic N might be linked to the enhanced NO 3 − leaching in 2013, and be linked to the increased N 2 O emissions in 2014. However, in both years the annual total amount of N lost through leaching was significantly greater than that through N 2 O emissions. The enhanced N 2 O emissions driven by wet‐season storms were correlated with an increase in nirS abundance. Our results suggest that increased frequency of droughts and storms will decrease soil inorganic N content in warm and humid subtropical forests mainly through enhanced leaching losses.