| Literature DB >> 31527802 |
David Rex1,2, Timothy J Clough3, Karl G Richards4, Leo M Condron3, Cecile A M de Klein5, Sergio E Morales6, Gary J Lanigan4.
Abstract
Ruminant urine patches on grazed grassland are a significant source of agricultural nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. Of the many biotic and abiotic N2O production mechanisms initiated following urine-urea deposition, codenitrification resulting in the formation of hybrid N2O, is one of the least understood. Codenitrification forms hybrid N2O via biotic N-nitrosation, co-metabolising organic and inorganic N compounds (N substrates) to produce N2O. The objective of this study was to assess the relative significance of different N substrates on codenitrification and to determine the contributions of fungi and bacteria to codenitrification. 15N-labelled ammonium, hydroxylamine (NH2OH) and two amino acids (phenylalanine or glycine) were applied, separately, to sieved soil mesocosms eight days after a simulated urine event, in the absence or presence of bacterial and fungal inhibitors. Soil chemical variables and N2O fluxes were monitored and the codenitrified N2O fluxes determined. Fungal inhibition decreased N2O fluxes by ca. 40% for both amino acid treatments, while bacterial inhibition only decreased the N2O flux of the glycine treatment, by 14%. Hydroxylamine (NH2OH) generated the highest N2O fluxes which declined with either fungal or bacterial inhibition alone, while combined inhibition resulted in a 60% decrease in the N2O flux. All the N substrates examined participated to some extent in codenitrification. Trends for codenitrification under the NH2OH substrate treatment followed those of total N2O fluxes (85.7% of total N2O flux). Codenitrification fluxes under non-NH2OH substrate treatments (0.7-1.2% of total N2O flux) were two orders of magnitude lower, and significant decreases in these treatments only occurred with fungal inhibition in the amino acid substrate treatments. These results demonstrate that in situ studies are required to better understand the dynamics of codenitrification substrates in grazed pasture soils and the associated role that fungi have with respect to codenitrification.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31527802 PMCID: PMC6746759 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-49989-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Soil response to urea and treatment application. The N2O fluxes over time (a) of the no inhibition treatments. Before Day 9 the N2O fluxes did not significantly differ between the positive control and the treatments. On Day 9, the N2O fluxes of all treatments and the positive control increased as listed in Table 1, for simplicity only the non-inhibition treatments are depicted in Fig. 1 to visualize the range of increase. Below the NO2− concentration in the soils as measured in the NO2− control. (b) These partially destructive analysis was not performed within the treatment soils and the positive controls, but depicts the assumed NO2− concentration development within these soils. The soil surface pH was measured in all jars, however, all treatment soil surface pH values did not differ from the depicted positive control, in contrast to the negative control. (c) Each symbol represents a mean of n = 3, all error bars are ± SD.
Emission rates of total N2O (µg N2O-N m−2 h−1) of the inhibitor × N substrate treatments on Day 9.
| N substrate | no inhibition | fungal | bacterial | combined inhibition | sterilized soil | test & |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glycine | 2130 | 1144 | 1830 | 1331 | 2 | Holm-Sidak* |
| Phenyl. | 1796 | 1182 | 1705 | 1267 | 1 | t-tests* |
| Ammonium | 1405 | 1142 | 1010 | 904 | 3 | Tukey** |
| Hydroxy. | 4496 | 3563 | 3324 | 2671 | 1246 | Holm-Sidak* |
As taken 24 h after the microbial inhibition, these data represent the N2O emissions during the overlapping time of N substrates starting to contribute to N2O emissions and still working microbial inhibitors. Different statistical analyses have been used to determine differences, dependent on normal or non-normal distributed data and homogeneous or inhomogeneous variances.
Values are means (n = 3) with standard deviation, different letters indicate the level of significance based on the mentioned test, where all inhibition treatments for each N substrate are tested against each other. Level of significance: *p < 0.05, **p = 0.001.
N2O 15N enrichment (atm%) of the inhibitor × N substrate treatments on Day 9, 24 h after the treatment application.
| N substrate | no inhibition | fungal | bacterial | combined inhibition | sterilized soil | test & |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glycine | 0.370 | 0.380 | 0.373 | 0.375 | 1.211 | Tukey* |
| Phenyl. | 0.377 | 0.378 | 0.900 | Tukey* | ||
| Ammonium | 0.481 | 0.374 | 0.475ǂ ± 0.026 | 0.384 | 0.896 | Tukey* |
| Hydroxy. | 41.587 | 43.147 | 27.165 | 30.384 | 44.219 | Dunn’s Method* |
Different statistical analyses have been used to determine differences, dependent on normal or non-normal distributed data and homogeneous or inhomogeneous variances.
Values are means (n = 3) with standard deviation, different letters indicate the level of significance (p < 0.05) based on the mentioned test where all inhibition treatments for each N substrate are tested against each other. For phenylalanine the italic font indicates no significant difference if compared to the positive control (+urea, nil N substrate) on the same day (0.363 ± 0.004). ǂFor bacterial inhibition of the ammonium substrate n = 2, thus and it is excluded from the Tukey analysis.
Codenitrification fluxes (N2Oco, µg N2O-N m−2 h−1) of the inhibitor × N substrate treatments on Day 9, 24 h after the treatment application.
| N substrate | no inhibition | fungal | bacterial | combined inhibition | sterilized soil | test & |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glycine | 16 | 9 | 14 | 10 | 0 | Holm-Sidak* |
| Phenyl. | 13 | 9 | 12 | 10 | 0 | Holm-Sidak* |
| Ammonium | 17 | 9 | 12 | 7 | 0 | Tukey* |
| Hydroxy. | 3851 | 3432 | 3034 | 2198 | 617 | Holm-Sidak* |
Different statistical analyses have been used to determine differences, dependent on normal or non-normal distributed data and homogeneous or inhomogeneous variances.
Values are means (n = 3) with standard deviation, different letters indicate the level of significance based on the mentioned test where all inhibition treatments for each N substrate are tested against each other. Level of significance: *p < 0.05.