Journalartikel

Inhibition of Elevated Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide to Soil Gross Nitrogen Mineralization Aggravated by Warming in an Agroecosystem


AutorenlisteTu, Xiaoshun; Wang, Jing; Liu, Xiaoyu; Elrys, Ahmed S.; Cheng, Yi; Zhang, Jinbo; Cai, Zu-Cong; Muller, Christoph

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2022

Seiten12745-12754

ZeitschriftEnvironmental Science & Technology

Bandnummer56

Heftnummer17

ISSN0013-936X

eISSN1520-5851

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c04378

VerlagAmerican Chemical Society


Abstract
The response of soil gross nitrogen (N) cycling to elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration and temperature has been extensively studied in natural and semi-natural ecosystems. However, how these factors and their interaction affect soil gross N dynamics in agroecosystems, strongly disturbed by human activity, remains largely unknown. Here, a N-15 tracer study under aerobic incubation was conducted to quantify soil gross N transformation rates in a paddy field exposed to elevated CO2 and/or temperature for 9 years in a warming and free air CO2 enrichment experiment. Results show that long-term exposure to elevated CO2 significantly inhibited or tended to inhibit gross N mineralization at elevated and ambient temperatures, respectively. The inhibition of soil gross N mineralization by elevating CO2 was aggravated by warming in this paddy field. The inhibition of gross N mineralization under elevated CO2 could be due to decreased soil pH. Long-term exposure to elevated CO2 also significantly reduced gross autotrophic nitrification at ambient temperature, probably due to decreased soil pH and gross N mineralization. In contrast, none of the gross N transformation rates were affected by long-term exposure to warming alone. Our study provides strong evidence that long-term dual exposure to elevated CO2 and temperature has a greater negative effect on gross N mineralization rate than the single exposure, potentially resulting in progressive N limitation in this agroecosystem and ultimately increasing demand for N fertilizer.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilTu, X., Wang, J., Liu, X., Elrys, A., Cheng, Y., Zhang, J., et al. (2022) Inhibition of Elevated Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide to Soil Gross Nitrogen Mineralization Aggravated by Warming in an Agroecosystem, Environmental Science & Technology, 56(17), pp. 12745-12754. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c04378

APA-ZitierstilTu, X., Wang, J., Liu, X., Elrys, A., Cheng, Y., Zhang, J., Cai, Z., & Muller, C. (2022). Inhibition of Elevated Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide to Soil Gross Nitrogen Mineralization Aggravated by Warming in an Agroecosystem. Environmental Science & Technology. 56(17), 12745-12754. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c04378



Schlagwörter


ECOSYSTEM RESPONSESinteractive effectN-15 TRACING MODELSN AVAILABILITYTRANSFORMATION RATESwarming

Zuletzt aktualisiert 2025-02-04 um 00:04