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The effect of soil pH and dicyandiamide (DCD) on N₂O emissions and ammonia oxidiser abundance in a stimulated grazed pasture soil

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Date
2014-08
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Purpose: Nitrous oxide (N₂O) is a potent greenhouse gas which is mainly produced from agricultural soils through the processes of nitrification and denitrification. Although denitrification is usually the major process responsible for N₂O emissions, N₂O production from nitrification can increase under some soil conditions. Soil pH can affect N₂O emissions by altering N transformations and microbial communities. Bacterial (AOB) and archaeal (AOA) ammonia oxidisers are important for N₂O production as they carry out the rate-limiting step of the nitrification process. Material and methods: A field study was conducted to investigate the effect of soil pH changes on N₂O emissions, AOB and AOA community abundance, and the efficacy of a nitrification inhibitor, dicyandiamide (DCD), at reducing N₂O emissions from animal urine applied to soil. The effect of three pH treatments, namely alkaline treatment (CaO/NaOH), acid treatment (HCl) and native (water) and four urine and DCD treatments as control (no urine or DCD), urine-only, DCD-only and urine + DCD were assessed in terms of their effect on N₂O emissions and ammonia oxidiser community growth. Results and discussion: Results showed that total N₂O emissions were increased when the soil was acidified by the acid treatment. This was probably due to incomplete denitrification caused by the inhibition of the assembly of the N₂O reductase enzyme under acidic conditions. AOB population abundance increased when the pH was increased in the alkaline treatment, particularly when animal urine was applied. In contrast, AOA grew in the acid treatment, once the initial inhibitory effect of the urine had subsided. The addition of DCD decreased total N₂O emissions significantly in the acid treatment and decreased peak N₂O emissions in all pH treatments. DCD also inhibited AOB growth in both the alkaline and native pH treatments and inhibited AOA growth in the acid treatment. Conclusions: These results show that N₂O emissions increase when soil pH decreases. AOB and AOA prefer different soil pH environments to grow: AOB growth is favoured in an alkaline pH and AOA growth favoured in more acidic soils. DCD was effective in inhibiting AOB and AOA when they were actively growing under the different soil pH conditions.
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