Abstract

Partially substituting chemical fertilizer with organic manure can aid in the disposal of agricultural wastes via recycling into agricultural land, reduce chemical fertilizer application, and influence nitrogen (N) transformation. However, relatively few studies have investigated the association between soil physicochemical properties, denitrifier communities and N2O emission after short-term substitution of organic manure in vegetable fields. We conducted a short-term vegetable field experiment which included one control treatment (CT, no fertilizer) and three fertilization treatments containing equal amount of total N, phosphorus and potassium (CF, chemical fertilizer only; CMR, chemical fertilizer plus mushroom residue; COM, chemical fertilizer plus cattle manure). The results showed that partial substitution of chemical fertilizer with organic manure greatly increased cumulative N2O emissions, N2O emission factors and yield-scaled N2O emissions by 122-203%, 238-600% and 128-181%, respectively. Compared with the CF treatment, short-term substitution with organic manure reduced the abundance of nirS- and nosZ-type denitrifiers, and increased that of nirK-type denitrifiers. Modeling indicated that nirS abundance, together with soil available N, NIR activity, nirK abundance, SOC, NH4+, and NO3- were the primary factors associated with cumulative N2O emissions. The denitrifier community composition of the CF- treated soil was separated from that of soils treated with CMR and COM, and was primarily influenced by soil NH4+ concentration. NIR activity showed a significant correlation with denitrifier community composition. Overall, short-term substitution of chemical fertilizer with cattle manure (lower C/N ratio) reduced the abundance of nirS- and nosZ-type denitrifiers, but stimulated N2O emission.

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