Abstract

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is an important greenhouse gas in which the main sources are tropical rainforest and agricultural soils. N2O is produced in soils by microbial processes, which are enhanced by the application of nitrogenous fertilizers. The soil N2O bulk isotopic composition (δ 15Nbulk and δ 18O) and the “site-specific,” or intramolecular, 15N isotopic composition, i.e., the 15N/14N ratio at the cenral (α) or terminal (β) nitrogen position, expressed in this study as δ 15N α and δ 15N β could help identify both the sources (natural and anthropogenic) and microbial pathways of N2O production and consumption prior to emission.We report new isotope measurements of soil N2O emissions and from soil air collected during the rainy season in a mature tropical forest (Tapajos National Forest, Para, Brazil) and in a tropical agricultural corn field (“Fundo Tierra Nueva,” Guarico State, Venezuela). The statistically different δ 15Nbulk emission weighted average between the mature forest (−18.0‰ ± 4.0‰, n = 6) and agricultural corn field (−34.3‰ ± 12.4‰, n = 17) suggest that theδ 15Nbulk data are useful for distinguishing N2O fluxes from fertilized agricultural and natural “background” soils. They also demonstrate that the site-specific δ 15N measurements have the potential to provide a new tool to differentiate between the production and consumption N2O microbiological processes in soils. This study further demonstrates that the observed correlations (or lack thereof) between δ 15N α ,δ 15N β , and δ 18O can be used to estimate the relative proportion of N2O that would have been emitted to the air but was consumed via reduction of N2O to N2 within the soil.

Highlights

  • [2] Nitrous oxide (N2O) is an important greenhouse gas with a mean positive radiative forcing representing 6% of the total greenhouse gas contribution

  • Larger N2O/N2 ratios are dependent of low pH, and/or the presence of O2 and abundant NO3−

  • [28] The TNF Amazon tropical forest soils have an emission‐weighted average bulk d15N value of −18.0‰ ± 4.0‰ (n = 6). This average is within the range of the emission‐weighted average values found by Pérez et al [2000] in Amazon tropical forest soils from another mature Amazon Forest site (Paragominas, Para state), which averaged −6.6‰ ± 11.1‰ (n = 14)

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Summary

Introduction

[2] Nitrous oxide (N2O) is an important greenhouse gas with a mean positive radiative forcing representing 6% of the total greenhouse gas contribution. In our previous soil incubation experiments conducted on Brazilian natural forest soils [Pérez et al, 2006], we found significant differences in site preference values (defined as d15Na − d15Nb) for N2O produced for nitrification and denitrification: −16.8‰ ± 8.4‰ versus 9.4‰ ± 8.1‰ relative to atmospheric N2 (using Toyoda and Yoshida [1999] scale (see section 2), respectively. This difference suggests that reactions involved in denitrification result in 15N enrichment at the central N relative to the terminal N, while reactions during nitrification result in smaller 15N discrimination between the central N and the terminal N under our experimental conditions. These new observations will be discussed for the purpose of better characterization of N2O isotopic signatures from the emission sources and potential differentiation of the microbial mechanisms of N2O production and consumption

Data and Methodology
Results
13 Aug 2005 Chamber 5
Discussion
Site Preference Values for Nitrification‐ Versus
Conclusions
Full Text
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