Abstract

Adding nitrogen fertilizers to agricultural soils contributes to increasing concentrations of nitrous oxide (N2 O) in the atmosphere. However, the impacts of N addition on soil organic matter (SOM) turnover, SOM availability, and the ensuing SOM-derived N2 O emissions remain elusive. Within this context, the net change in direction and rate of SOM-derived N2 O production triggered by added N is termed the N2 O priming effect. This incubation study examined the sources and priming of N2 O production as a function of urea addition and multiple moisture contents in a soil with high SOM (55g organic C kg-1 ). We assessed four water-filled pore space (WFPS) conditions: 28, 40, 52, and 64%. Relative to controls receiving no N, urea addition increased N2 O production by 2.6 times (P<.001). Cumulative N2 O production correlated well with nitrification rates (r=.75; P=.03). We used 15 N-labeled urea to trace the added urea into N2 O. Of the N added via urea, the recovery as N2 O-N shifted from 0.02 to 0.17% when WFPS increased from 28 to 64% (P<.05). We also partitioned the N2 O production into urea vs. SOM sources. More N2 O was sourced from SOM than urea, with 59 ± 2% N2 O originating from SOM. The magnitude of SOM-derived N2 O under urea was larger than that of the control, revealing that positive N2 O priming was triggered by urea addition. Upon subtracting the controls, the primed N2 O was a consistent 19 ± 2% of the total N2 O produced by urea-amended soils. Nevertheless, the priming magnitude rose sharply with increasing moisture by more than one order of magnitude from 4 to 48μg N2 O-N kg-1 soil and in exponential mode (R2 =.98). Soil moisture, SOM, and nitrification interacted to drive the sources and priming of N2 O.

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