Biological mitigation of soil nitrous oxide emissions by plant metabolites

Author:

Lu Yufang12,Wang Fangjia12,Min Ju12,Kronzucker Herbert J.3,Hua Yao12,Yu Haoming4,Zhou Feng456ORCID,Shi Weiming127ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences Nanjing China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. School of BioSciences The University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia

4. Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

5. Jiangsu Province Engineering Research Center of Watershed Geospatial Intelligence, College of Geography and Remote Sensing Hohai University Nanjing China

6. Southwest United Graduate School Kunming China

7. International Research Centre for Environmental Membrane Biology Foshan University Foshan China

Abstract

AbstractPlant metabolites significantly affect soil nitrogen (N) cycling, but their influence on nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions has not been quantitatively analyzed on a global scale. We conduct a comprehensive meta‐analysis of 173 observations from 42 articles to evaluate global patterns of and principal factors controlling N2O emissions in the presence of root exudates and extracts. Overall, plant metabolites promoted soil N2O emissions by about 10%. However, the effects of plant metabolites on N2O emissions from soils varied with experimental conditions and properties of both metabolites and soils. Primary metabolites, such as sugars, amino acids, and organic acids, strongly stimulated soil N2O emissions, by an average of 79%, while secondary metabolites, such as phenolics, terpenoids, and flavonoids, often characterized as both biological nitrification inhibitors (BNIs) and biological denitrification inhibitors (BDIs), reduced soil N2O emissions by an average of 41%. The emission mitigation effects of BNIs/BDIs were closely associated with soil texture and pH, increasing with increasing soil clay content and soil pH on acidic and neutral soils, and with decreasing soil pH on alkaline soils. We furthermore present soil incubation experiments that show that three secondary metabolite types act as BNIs to reduce N2O emissions by 32%–45%, while three primary metabolite classes possess a stimulatory effect of 56%–63%, confirming the results of the meta‐analysis. Our results highlight the potential role and application range of specific secondary metabolites in biomitigation of global N2O emissions and provide new biological parameters for N2O emission models that should help improve the accuracy of model predictions.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Publisher

Wiley

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