Effects of straw management and N levels on gross nitrogen transformations in fluvo-aquic soil of the North China Plain

Straw incorporation with nitrogen (N) fertilization is crucial for enhancing soil fertility and minimizing negative environmental impacts by altering the magnitude and direction of soil N transformation processes. However, the response of soil N transformations to long-term carbon (C) and N inputs,...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-09, Vol.944, p.173652, Article 173652
Hauptverfasser: Ren, Guocui, Zhang, Xianfeng, Zhang, Jinbo, Mu, Lan, Xin, Xiuli, Yun, Yiming, Zhu, Anning, Ge, Shuchun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Straw incorporation with nitrogen (N) fertilization is crucial for enhancing soil fertility and minimizing negative environmental impacts by altering the magnitude and direction of soil N transformation processes. However, the response of soil N transformations to long-term carbon (C) and N inputs, and their primary driving factors, remain poorly understood. Thus, a 15N tracing study was conducted to investigate the effects of straw incorporation (AS) and straw removal (NS) with N levels of 0, 150 and 250 kg N ha−1 per season (N0, N150 and N250) on gross N transformation rates in the North China Plain after 6-year trial. Results indicated that at N0, AS significantly increased soil microbial immobilization of nitrate (NO3−-N, INO3) and autotrophic nitrification rates (ONH4) compared to NS. With N fertilization, AS increased gross N immobilization (Itotal), ammonium-N immobilization (NH4+-N, INH4), net NH4+-N immobilization (InetNH4) and net NH4+-N absorption rates (AnetNH4). Specifically, at N150, AS significantly increased recalcitrant organic N mineralization rate (MNrec), while significantly reducing ONH4, labile organic N mineralization (MNlab), and gross N mineralization rates (Mtotal). At N250, AnetNH4, MNlab, MNrec and ONH4 under AS were significantly higher than under NS. Nitrogen application significantly increased ONH4, Itotal and INO3 under two straw management practices, and enhanced INH4 and InetNH4 under AS. Compared to N250, N150 significantly increased INH4 and InetNH4 under AS, while decreasing Mtotal. Opposite results were observed under NS. Meanwhile, NO3−-N and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) were master factors controlling immobilization, total nitrogen (TN), hydrolysable NH4+-N (HNN) and stable organic N significantly affected AnetNH4, while labile organic N were the key environmental factors affecting MNrec, all of which positively influenced the rates of assimilation, mineralization and clay mineral adsorption. Overall, this study provides new insights into reducing N fertilization under straw incorporation by quantifying soil N transformation processes. [Display omitted] •Straw incorporation with N addition promotes biotic and abiotic N immobilization.•Biotic N immobilization improved after straw input due to increased DOC and labile N.•Under straw input, mineralization and nitrification were lower at N150 than at N250.•Labile organic N facilitated the mineralization of recalcitrant organic N to NH4+.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173652