Abstract

Rare-earth fertilizers have long been used in agriculture in China. The consequences of these applications are of more recent concern. In our study, an experiment was carried out to identify the effects of applying rare-earth fertilizers on emission of nitrous oxide from paddy and dryland soils in northern China. Normal dosage of rare-earth fertilizers only, normal dosage of urea only, normal dosage of urea plus rare-earth fertilizers, and a normal urea application plus a 10-fold increase in the dosage of rare-earth fertilizers were applied to the soils in pots, prepared for our experiment. A static closed-chamber technique was used to measure nitrous oxide emission flux from the soil in the pots before and after fertilization during the experiment. The results show that the application of only rare-earth fertilizers did not have any visible effect on the emission of nitrous oxide from both paddy and dryland soils. Applying a normal dosage rare-earth fertilizers plus urea led to greater emission of nitrous oxide from the soils than only applying the normal dosage of urea. When a 10-fold increase of rare-earth fertilizers dosage was added to a normal dosage of urea, the emission of nitrous oxide from the soils increased even further. We speculate that the application of rare-earth fertilizers leads to an increase of available NH4+-N from urea hydrolysis and activate bacteria and enzymes in nitrification and de-nitrification.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call