Abstract

Soil microbial immobilization of nitrate (NO3−-N, INO3) and its role in mitigating NO3−-N pollution in agricultural ecosystems globally is often neglected because of the tenet that microbes preferentially use ammonium over NO3−-N. Soil INO3 driven by heterotrophic microorganisms is often carbon (C)-limited, and may therefore be stimulated by C sources with high C/nitrogen (N) ratios. Here, using 15NO3−-N labelling coupled with acetylene inhibition, quantitative PCR and Illumina high-throughput sequencing approaches, we demonstrated that INO3 was stimulated from zero to a substantial level by crop residue amendment without any environmental risk; the degree of stimulation depending on residue quality and soil type. The stimulation was predicted well by C mineralization of the added residue. Soil with a lower initial nutrient status had reduced INO3 efficiency due to stronger C constraint and lower return on energy investment. Fast-growing bacterial r-strategists were identified as the key driver of INO3. We estimate that, globally, residue amendment could cause a total NO3−-N loss reduction of about 33.6 Tg N yr−1 through INO3 stimulation. We suggest that soil INO3 driven by addition of exogenous C is an overlooked process that can help curb NO3−-N accumulation in soil and its subsequent release to the environment, the “nitrate time bomb”.

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