Abstract

Few studies have assessed the common, yet unproven, hypothesis that an increase of plant nitrogen (N) uptake and/or recovery efficiency (NRE) will reduce nitrous oxide (N2O) emission during crop production. Understanding the relationships between N2O emissions and crop N uptake and use efficiency parameters can help inform crop N management recommendations for both efficiency and environmental goals. Analyses were conducted to determine which of several commonly used crop N uptake-derived parameters related most strongly to growing season N2O emissions under varying N management practices in North American maize systems. Nitrogen uptake-derived variables included total aboveground N uptake (TNU), grain N uptake (GNU), N recovery efficiency (NRE), net N balance (NNB) in relation to GNU [NNB(GNU)] and TNU [NNB(TNU)], and surplus N (SN). The relationship between N2O and N application rate was sigmoidal with relatively small emissions for N rates <130 kg ha−1, and a sharp increase for N rates from 130 to 220 kg ha−1; on average, N2O increased linearly by about 5 g N per kg of N applied for rates up to 220 kg ha−1. Fairly strong and significant negative relationships existed between N2O and NRE when management focused on N application rate (r2 = 0.52) or rate and timing combinations (r2 = 0.65). For every percentage point increase, N2O decreased by 13 g N ha−1 in response to N rates, and by 20 g N ha−1 for NRE changes in response to rate-by-timing treatments. However, more consistent positive relationships (R2 = 0.73–0.77) existed between N2O and NNB(TNU), NNB(GNU), and SN, regardless of rate and timing of N application; on average N2O emission increased by about 5, 7, and 8 g N, respectively, per kg increase of NNB(GNU), NNB(TNU), and SN. Neither N source nor placement influenced the relationship between N2O and NRE. Overall, our analysis indicated that a careful selection of appropriate N rate applied at the right time can both increase NRE and reduce N2O. However, N2O reduction benefits of optimum N rate-by-timing practices were achieved most consistently with management systems that reduced NNB through an increase of grain N removal or total plant N uptake relative to the total fertilizer N applied to maize. Future research assessing crop or N management effects on N2O should include N uptake parameter measurements to better understand N2O emission relationships to plant NRE and N uptake.

Highlights

  • North America (Canada, Mexico, and the United States) plays an important role in the world’s maize production and the consequent nitrous oxide emissions arising from high nitrogen (N) fertilizer applied during maize production

  • The main objectives of this study were to assess relationships between growing season N2O and crop N uptake-related metrics (TNU/grain N uptake (GNU), NRE, Net N balance (NNB), and surplus N (SN)) and determine which of these parameters related most strongly and consistently to N2O emissions under commonly applied N management practices in North America’s maize systems, using data synthesized from field experiments where N2O emission and N uptake were measured in the same site-years

  • The NRE values exceeding 100% in the data occurred at lower N rates (

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Summary

Introduction

North America (Canada, Mexico, and the United States) plays an important role in the world’s maize production and the consequent nitrous oxide emissions arising from high nitrogen (N) fertilizer applied during maize production. Maize cropping systems in North America are of major concern with respect to nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. Nitrous oxide is both an important ozone-depleting chemical (Ravishankara et al, 2009), and a major greenhouse gas that is believed to contribute to global climate change with a potency that is about 310 times the global warming potential of CO2 (IPCC, 2007). N2O is produced predominantly through bacterial-mediated transformations of inorganic nitrogen (N), but the quantity and intensity of N2O emission so emitted is dependent on soil and N fertilizer management options applied, and their interactions with environmental factors during crop production (Venterea et al, 2012)

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