The impact of drought length and intensity on N cycling gene abundance, transcription and the size of an N2O hot moment from a temperate grassland soil

被引:12
|
作者
Barrat, H. A. [1 ]
Clark, I. M. [2 ]
Evans, J. [3 ]
Chadwick, D. R. [4 ]
Cardenas, L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Rothamsted Res, Sustainable Agr Sci Dept, Devon, North Wyke, England
[2] Rothamsted Res, Sustainable Agr Sci Dept, Harpenden, Herts, England
[3] Rothamsted Res, Computat & Analyt Sci, Harpenden, Herts, England
[4] Bangor Univ, Sch Nat Sci, Bangor LL57 2UW, Gwynedd, Wales
来源
关键词
Soil moisture; Nitrous oxide; Dry wet cycles; Legacy; Water filled pore space; NITROUS-OXIDE PRODUCTION; NITRIC-OXIDE; CARBON-DIOXIDE; ORGANIC N; DENITRIFICATION; NITRIFICATION; HYDROXYLAMINE; RESPONSES; EMISSION; CYCLES;
D O I
10.1016/j.soilbio.2022.108606
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between drought length, drought intensity and the size of the N2O hot moment. It selected two treatments to deduce the main nitrogen cycling process producing N2O (increasing WFPS from 40% to 90%, and from 70% to 90%), by destructively sampling soil cores to analyse gene abundance, transcription, and changes in soil chemistry (TON, NH4+, DOC). Five other drought and rewetting treatments on packed soil cores were selected to create the drought curves described in Barrat et al. (2020): these included increases of WFPS from 40% to 90%, 50%-90%, 60%-90%, 70%-90%, and 30%-60%. For each treatment, drought lengths were imposed from 0 to 30 days. A quadratic linear regression was fitted to the cumulative emissions data. This model explained a significant proportion of the total variation in the data (R-2 = 0.72, p & LE; 0.001). All treatments had an increase in daily N2O emissions post wetting typical of a hot moment apart from the 30%-60% WFPS treatment. In terms of drought intensity, the 40%-90% WFPS was significantly larger than rest, probably due to a relatively larger change in water potential compared to the other treatments. The response to drought length followed a quadratic curve with a downward linear trend, with the largest emissions observed between 10 and 15 days of drought, and the smallest at 0 and 30 days. We suggest a 2-stage dormancy strategy to explain this, where microbes under dry conditions store osmolytes which are catabolised upon rewetting, however at prolonged negative water potentials this strategy is no longer effective, and so they enter a deeper state of dormancy where they can no longer rapidly respond to the changing water potential. Given the delayed response after rewetting, and the inverted U shaped curve in terms of drought length, it seems likely that the majority of emissions are of biological origin. The soil's chemistry data suggested that NH4+ was a key factor controlling the emission flux, but the transcriptional and genomic data were inconclusive. This study therefore suggests that future experiments should focus changes in osmolyte accumulation and catabolism as the key explanation for N2O hot moments, rather than changes in genomic and transcriptomic data or soil substrates, which do not always correlate with emissions.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Contrasting response of two grassland soils to N addition and moisture levels: N2O emission and functional gene abundance
    Long, Xi-En
    Shen, Ju-Pei
    Wang, Jun-Tao
    Zhang, Li-Mei
    Di, Hongjie
    He, Ji-Zheng
    JOURNAL OF SOILS AND SEDIMENTS, 2017, 17 (02) : 384 - 392
  • [22] Effects of cultivation on N2O emission and seasonal quantitative variations of related microbes in a temperate grassland soil
    Huang, B
    Chen, GX
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES, 2001, 13 (03) : 376 - 379
  • [23] Contrasting response of two grassland soils to N addition and moisture levels: N2O emission and functional gene abundance
    Xi-En Long
    Ju-Pei Shen
    Jun-Tao Wang
    Li-Mei Zhang
    Hongjie Di
    Ji-Zheng He
    Journal of Soils and Sediments, 2017, 17 : 384 - 392
  • [24] The effect of water table depth on emissions of N2O from a grassland soil
    Dobbie, KE
    Smith, KA
    SOIL USE AND MANAGEMENT, 2006, 22 (01) : 22 - 28
  • [25] DENITRIFICATION AND N2O EMISSION FROM URINE-AFFECTED GRASSLAND SOIL
    DEKLEIN, CAM
    VANLOGTESTIJN, RSP
    PLANT AND SOIL, 1994, 163 (02) : 235 - 241
  • [26] Drought turns a Central European Norway spruce forest soil from an N2O source to a transient N2O sink
    Goldberg, Stefanie Daniela
    Gebauer, Gerhard
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2009, 15 (04) : 850 - 860
  • [27] Denitrification gene pools, transcription and kinetics of NO, N2O and N2 production as affected by soil pH
    Liu, Binbin
    Morkved, Pal Tore
    Frostegard, Asa
    Bakken, Lars Reier
    FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2010, 72 (03) : 407 - 417
  • [28] The effect of renovation of long-term temperate grassland on N2O emissions and N leaching from contrasting soils
    Krol, D. J.
    Jones, M. B.
    Williams, M.
    Richards, K. G.
    Bourdin, F.
    Lanigan, G. J.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 560 : 233 - 240
  • [29] Biochar mitigates the N2O emissions from acidic soil by increasing the nosZ and nirK gene abundance and soil pH
    Aamer, Muhammad
    Shaaban, Muhammad
    Hassan, Muhammad Umair
    Huang Guoqin
    Liu Ying
    Tang Hai Ying
    Rasul, Fand
    Ma Qiaoying
    Li Zhuanling
    Rasheed, Adnan
    Peng, Zhang
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2020, 255
  • [30] Soil type and wetting intensity control the enhancement extent of N2O efflux in soil with drought and rewetting cycles
    Jiao, Panpan
    Yang, Lei
    Li, Zhongwu
    Zheng, Peng
    Nie, Xiaodong
    INTERNATIONAL SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION RESEARCH, 2024, 12 (01) : 137 - 144