Central Role of Nitrogen Fertilizer Relative to Water Management in Determining Direct Nitrous Oxide Emissions From Global Rice‐Based Ecosystems

Author:

Song Hanxiong1ORCID,Zhu Qiuan2,Blanchet Jean‐Pierre1ORCID,Chen Zhi3ORCID,Zhang Kerou4ORCID,Li Tong5ORCID,Zhou Feng6ORCID,Peng Changhui15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institut des sciences de l'environnement Université du Québec à Montréal Montreal QC Canada

2. College of Geography and Remote Sensing Hohai University Nanjing China

3. Department of Building, Civil, and Environmental Engineering Concordia University Montreal QC Canada

4. Institute of Wetland Research Chinese Academy of Forestry Beijing China

5. School of Geographic Sciences Hunan Normal University Changsha China

6. Sino‐France Institute of Earth Systems Science Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractThe increasing atmospheric nitrous oxide (N2O) concentration stems from the development of agriculture. However, N2O emissions from global rice‐based ecosystems have not been explicitly and systematically quantified. Therefore, this study aims to estimate the spatiotemporal magnitudes of the N2O emissions from global rice‐based ecosystems and determine different contribution factors by improving a process‐based biogeochemical model, TRIPLEX‐GHG v2.0. Model validation suggested that the modeled N2O agreed well with field observations under varying management practices at daily, seasonal, and annual steps. Simulated N2O emissions from global rice‐based ecosystems exhibited significant increasing trends from 0.026 ± 0.0013 to 0.18 ± 0.003 TgN yr−1 from 1910 to 2020, with ∼69.5% emissions attributed to the rice‐growing seasons. Irrigated rice ecosystems accounted for a majority of global rice N2O emissions (∼76.9%) because of their higher N2O emission rates than rainfed systems. Regarding spatial analysis, Southern China, Northeast India, and Southeast Asia are hotspots for rice‐based N2O emissions. Experimental scenarios revealed that N fertilizer is the largest global rice‐N2O source, especially since the 1960s (0.047 ± 0.010 TgN yr−1, 35.24%), while the impact of expanded irrigation plays a minor role. Overall, this study provides a better understanding of the rice‐based ecosystem in the global agricultural N2O budget; further, it quantitively demonstrated the central role of N fertilizer in rice‐based N2O emissions by including rice crop calendars, covering non‐rice growing seasons, and differentiating the effects of various water regimes and input N forms. Our findings emphasize the significance of co‐management of N fertilizer and water regimes in reducing the net climate impact of global rice cultivation.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies

China Scholarship Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

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

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