Full substitution of chemical fertilizer by organic manure decreases soil N2O emissions driven by ammonia oxidizers and gross nitrogen transformations

Author:

Hei Zewen1ORCID,Peng Yiting1,Hao Shenglei1,Li Yiming1,Yang Xue1ORCID,Zhu Tongbin23ORCID,Müller Christoph45ORCID,Zhang Hongyan1,Hu Hangwei6ORCID,Chen Yongliang1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, National Academy of Agriculture Green Development, Key Laboratory of Plant‐Soil Interactions, Ministry of Education, State Key Laboratory of Nutrient Use and Management China Agricultural University Beijing China

2. Key Laboratory of Karst Dynamics, MLR & Guangxi, Institute of Karst Geology Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences Guilin China

3. International Research Center on Karst Under the Auspices of UNESCO Guilin China

4. Department of Plant Ecology Justus‐Liebig University Giessen Giessen Germany

5. School of Biology and Environmental Science University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

6. School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Science The University of Melbourne Parkville Vic. Australia

Abstract

AbstractReplacing synthetic fertilizer by organic manure has been shown to reduce emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O), but the specific roles of ammonia oxidizing microorganisms and gross nitrogen (N) transformation in regulating N2O remain unclear. Here, we examined the effect of completely replacing chemical fertilizer with organic manure on N2O emissions, ammonia oxidizers, gross N transformation rates using a 13‐year field manipulation experiment. Our results showed that organic manure reduced cumulative N2O emissions by 16.3%–210.3% compared to chemical fertilizer. The abundance of ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB) was significantly lower in organic manure compared with chemical fertilizer during three growth stages of maize. Organic manure also significantly decreased AOB alpha diversity and changed their community structure. However, organic manure substitution increased the abundance of ammonia oxidizing archaea and the alpha diversity of comammox Nitrospira compared to chemical fertilizer. Interestingly, organic manure decreased organic N mineralization by 23.2%–32.9%, and autotrophic nitrification rate by 10.5%–45.4%, when compared with chemical fertilizer. This study also found a positive correlation between AOB abundance, organic N mineralization and gross autotrophic nitrification rate with N2O emission, and their contribution to N2O emission was supported by random forest analysis. Our study highlights the key roles of ammonia oxidizers and N transformation rates in predicting cropland N2O.

Funder

National Basic Research Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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