Abstract

Drainage networks, consisting of different levels of ditches, play a positive role in removing reactive nitrogen (N) via self-purification before drainage water returns to natural water bodies. However, relatively little is known about the N removal capacity of irrigation agricultural systems with different drainage ditch levels. In this study, we employed soil core incubation and soil slurry 15N paired tracer techniques to investigate the N removal rate (i.e., N2 flux), denitrification, anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), and dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) rates in the Ningxia Yellow River irrigation district at various ditch levels, including field ditches (FD), paddy field ditches (PFD), lateral ditches (LD1 and LD2), branch ditches (BD1, BD2, BD3), and trunk ditches (TD). The results indicated that the N removal rate ranged from 44.7 to 165.22 nmol N g−1 h−1 in the ditches, in the following decreasing order: trunk ditches > branch ditches > paddy field ditches > lateral ditches > field ditches. This result suggested that the N removal rate in drainage ditches is determined by the ditch level. In addition, denitrification and anammox were the primary pathways for N removal in the ditches, contributing 68.40–76.64 % and 21.55–30.29 %, respectively, to the total N removal. In contrast, DNRA contributed only 0.82–2.15 % to the total nitrate reduction. The N removal rates were negatively correlated with soil EC and pH and were also constrained by the abundances of denitrification functional genes. Overall, our findings suggest that the ditch level should be considered when evaluating the N removal capacity of agricultural ditch systems.

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