Abstract

Increasing heavy rainfalls can strongly affect ecosystem nitrogen (N) cycling processes and thereby alter soil N fluxes and pools. However, the effects of heavy rainfalls on soil N fluxes and pools are poorly understood, particularly with regards to high rainfall timing under field conditions. We conducted a 3-year (2014–2016) manipulative experiment in which heavy rainfall was imposed in middle (plant peak growing stage) or late (plant senescent growth stage) growing season in a semiarid grassland of Inner Mongolia, China to explore the responses of N2O fluxes and soil total N contents and the underlying microbial mechanisms. Mid-season heavy rainfall promoted soil N2O emissions by 65% on average across the three years, attributable mainly to increases in denitrifying nirK and nirS abundances induced large denitrification at higher soil water contents. However, archaeal and bacterial amoA and narG genes did not change significantly due probably to counteracting effects of increased soil water content (positive) and soil pH (negative). Mid-season heavy rainfall led to 17% reduction in soil total N by the end of the last year of the study (2016), partly due to the enhanced accumulated N2O emissions over the three years. In contrast, late-season heavy rainfall did not change N2O emissions and soil total N contents even though soil water content, soil pH and nirK and nirS abundance were significantly increased, perhaps due to limitation by low temperature. Timing of the heavy rainfall events during the plant growing season strongly influenced their impacts on soil N fluxes and pools and heavy rainfalls in the peak stage of plant growth may potentially cause a positive feedback to global warming and exacerbate N limitation in terrestrial ecosystems.

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