Affiliation:
1. Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire AL5 2JQ, UK
2. Agrophysical Research Institute, Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, St Petersburg, Russia
Abstract
Bacterial denitrification results in the loss of fertilizer nitrogen and greenhouse gas emissions as nitrous oxides, but ecological factors in soil influencing denitrifier communities are not well understood, impeding the potential for mitigation by land management. Communities vary in the relative abundance of the alternative dissimilatory nitrite reductase genes
nirK
and
nirS
, and the nitrous oxide reductase gene
nosZ
; however, the significance for nitrous oxide emissions is unclear. We assessed the influence of different long-term fertilization and cultivation treatments in a 160-year-old field experiment, comparing the potential for denitrification by soil samples with the size and diversity of their denitrifier communities. Denitrification potential was much higher in soil from an area left to develop from arable into woodland than from a farmyard manure-fertilized arable treatment, which in turn was significantly higher than inorganic nitrogen-fertilized and unfertilized arable plots. This correlated with abundance of
nirK
but not
nirS,
the least abundant of the genes tested in all soils, showing an inverse relationship with
nirK
. Most genetic variation was seen in
nirK
, where sequences resolved into separate groups according to soil treatment. We conclude that bacteria containing
nirK
are most probably responsible for the increased denitrification potential associated with nitrogen and organic carbon in this soil.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
88 articles.
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