Spatial and temporal distributions of soil profile N2O as affected by N fertilization and straw incorporation in the rice-wheat rotation system
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    Abstract:

    Innovative management practices are required to increase soil fertility and to reduce nitrous oxide (N2O) emission from agricultural soils. Spatial heterogeneity of N2O flux is attributed to various soil properties associated with different management practices. N2O flux is the result of integration of N2O production, consumption, and transport processes within soil profiles. N2O production, consumption, and transport processes varied markedly with depth near the soil surface. Variations of N2O concentration were monitored at 7 cm, 15 cm, 30 cm, and 50 cm in depth along a soil profile (each monitoring point covering a range of 5 cm of soil layer) using an in-situ gas collection system under the rice-wheat annual rotation cropping system. The experiment was designed to have 2 levels of N application and 3 levels of straw incorporation, i.e. N0 (N 0 kg hm-2 crop-1) and N1 (N 250 kg hm-2 crop-1), and S0 (straw 0 t hm-2 crop-1), S1(straw 3 t hm-2 rice crop-1), and S2 (straw6 t hm-2 rice crop-1), forming four treatments, i.e. N0S0, N1S0, N1S1 and N1S2, and each treatment had 3 replicates. The observations, once a week over the two cycles of rice and wheat rotations from June 2010 to May, 2012 found that N2O concentrations in soil profiles demonstrated a significant feature of spatio-temporal distribution for all the treatments. N2O concentration peaked during the early growth stages of both wheat and rice, and then fluctuated slightly during the rest of the growth season; N fertilization significantly boosted the peak, while incorporation of rice straw, particularly in Treatment N1S2, lowered the peak. However, neither N fertilization nor straw incorporation affected seasonal dynamics of N2O concentrations in various soil layers of a profile. During the wheat seasons, distinct N2O concentration distributions were observed in the soil layers at 30 cm and 50 cm in depth. During the first wheat season, N2O concentration in soil profile displayed a decreasing order of 30 cm ≥ 50 cm ≥ 15 cm ≥ 7 cm and during the second wheat season, 50 cm ≥ 30 cm ≥ 15 cm ≥ 7 cm; But during the rice seasons, N2O focused in the surface soil layers, at 7 cm and 15 cm, and followed an order of 15 cm ≥ 7 cm ≥ 30 cm ≥ 50 cm in both rice seasons. Soil N2O concentrations in the three N fertilized treatments, N1S0, N1S1 and N1S2, were significantly higher than that in CK (N0S0). Particularly in Treatment N1S0, it was 2 to 3 times that in CK in all the corresponding soil layers during the two rice-wheat cycles (p<0.05). To the contrary, straw incorporation at a high rate significantly reduced N2O concentrations in the near surface soil layers (p<0.05), but increased to some extent in the lower soil layers in the rice season. The findings indicate that N2O concentrations vary markedly with depth in the soil layer between 0 and 50 cm under the annual rice and wheat rotation and that straw incorporation at a high rate markedly reduces N2O concentration near in the surface soil layer. The underlying mechanism of straw incorporation reducing N2O concentration in the surface soil layer requires further research.

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Pan Xiaojian, Liu Pingli, Li Lu, Zhou Ziqiang, Xiong Zhengqin. Spatial and temporal distributions of soil profile N2O as affected by N fertilization and straw incorporation in the rice-wheat rotation system[J]. Acta Pedologica Sinica,2015,52(2):364-371.

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History
  • Received:January 15,2014
  • Revised:May 08,2014
  • Adopted:July 25,2014
  • Online: December 25,2014
  • Published: