Compaction influences N₂O and N₂ emissions from ¹⁵N-labeled synthetic urine in wet soils during successive saturation/drainage cycles
Date
2015-09
Type
Journal Article
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Abstract
Nitrous oxide emitted from urine patches is a key source of agricultural greenhouse gas emissions. A better understanding of the complex soil environmental and biochemical regulation of urine-N transformations in wet soils is needed to predict N₂O emissions from grazing and also to develop targeted mitigation technologies. Soil aeration, gas diffusion and drainage are key factors regulating N transformations and are affected by compaction during grazing. To understand how soil compaction from animal treading influences N transformations of urine in wet soils, we applied pressures of 0, 220 and 400 kPa to repacked soil cores, followed by ¹⁵N-labeled synthetic urine, and then subjected the cores to three successive saturation–drainage cycles on tension tables from 0 to 10 kPa.
Compaction had a relatively small effect on soil bulk density (increasing from 0.81 to 0.88 Mg m⁻³), but strongly affected the pore size distribution. Compaction reduced both total soil porosity and macroporosity. It also affected the pore size distribution, principally by decreasing the proportion of 30–60 μm and 60–100 μm pores and increasing the proportion of micropores (<30 μm).
Rates of urine-N transformations, emissions of N₂ and N₂O, and the N₂O to N₂ ratio were affected by the saturation/drainage cycles and degree of compaction. During the first saturation–drainage cycle, production of both N₂O and N₂ was low (<0.4 mg N m⁻² h⁻¹), probably because of anaerobic conditions inhibiting nitrification. In the second saturation/drainage cycle, the predominant product was N₂ at all compaction rates. By the third cycle, with increasing availability of mineral-N substrates, N₂O was the dominant product in the uncompacted (max = 4.70 mg N m⁻² h⁻¹) and 220 kPa compacted soils (max = 7.65 mg N m⁻² h⁻¹) with lower amounts of N₂ produced, while N₂ was produced in similar quantities to N₂O (max = 3.11 mg N m⁻² h⁻¹) in the 400 kPa compacted soil. Reduced macroporosity in the most compacted soil contributed to more sustained N₂ and N₂O production as the soils drained. In addition, compaction affected the rate of change of soil pH and DOC, both of which affected the N₂O to N₂ ratio.
Denitrification during drainage and re-saturation may make a large contribution to soil N₂O emissions. Improving soil drainage and adopting grazing management practices that avoid soil compaction while increasing macroporosity will reduce total N₂O and N₂ emissions.
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