321-4 Laboratory Incubations Reveal Potential N2o Emission Link to Decomposed CO2 and N Input.

Poster Number 2435

See more from this Division: S11 Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: S11 General Soils & Environmental Quality: Greenhouse Gaseous Emissions From Soil
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Duke Energy Convention Center, Exhibit Hall AB, Level 1
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Ayaka W. Kishimoto-Mo, Noriko Oura, Aya Miyata, Seiichiro Yonemura and Sadao Eguchi, National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305-0864, Japan
Agricultural upland soil is either a potential source or sink of greenhouse gases (GHG) depend on the management practices of cropping and fertilization systems. While mitigation GHG through increased sequestration of carbon in soils by organic amendments applicationd, the trade-off with N2O emission is an issue to concern. Long-term organic matter applications not only increase soil organic carbon but also change organic matter quality such as increasing labile carbon proportion. This may lead to changes in nitrogen mineralization and so as the emission of N2O. We used a laboratory incubation approach to measure CO2 and N2O emissions from two Andisols managed under conventional fertilizer (CF) and long-term straw compost (SC) applications in central Japan. After 15 years of straw compost applying, the soil carbon content was 5.8% which was greater than the conventional fertilizer management (4.2%). The aim of this study was to assess the effects of long-term straw compost applying on soil organic matter decomposition (CO2 emission) and N2O emission in response to temperature and fertilizer-N addition.

Soil samples were incubated with and without fertilizer-N addition for 90 days after a 10-day pre-incubation period. Incubation was carried out at 15 oC, 25 oC, and 35oC with soil water contents all adjusted to pF 1.5. For all treatments SC showed greater CO2 and N2O emissions per gram dried soil base. For example without fertilizer-N addition at 25 oC, the 90-day accumulated respired CO2 was 2.3 times higher in SC than CF while N2O emission was 3.8 times greater in SC than CF. We found potentially (i.e. without fertilizer-N addition) N2O emission was significantly positive related to respired CO2 due to more nitrogen mineralization following more decomposition of organic matter. Adding fertilizer-N did not change the total CO2 emission but resulted in much greater N2O emissions than without N addition. However, the timing of peak in N2O emission was different between SC and CF. CF showed the peak of N2O emission in the first week for all treatment temperatures, while N2O emitted more slowing in SC. The results indicate long-term straw compost applying could have changed the soil carbon quality that may change the magnitude of soil N2O emission in response to fertilizer-N addition.

See more from this Division: S11 Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: S11 General Soils & Environmental Quality: Greenhouse Gaseous Emissions From Soil