Abstract

Nitrogen (N) fertilizers increase agricultural yields, but also lead to the release of the greenhouse gases nitrous oxide (N2O) and ammonia (NH3). This not only reduces the efficiency of N use, but also results in climate change and loss of biodiversity. The use of nitrification inhibitors may improve the efficiency of N use and reduce the emission of greenhouse gases. We tested three inhibitors (NZONE MAX, Piadin and N-(n-butyl) thiophosphoric triamide (NBPT)) added to two common N fertilizers (urea and urea ammonium nitrate (UAN)) and determined emissions of CO2, N2O and NH3 to evaluate the effectiveness of these three inhibitors and to improve our understanding of the soil nitrogen cycle. NBPT effectively reduced NH3 volatilization by 50% (from 3.0 g NH3-N m−2 in urea alone to 1.4 g NH3-N m−2 in urea + NBPT). Piadin decreased N2O emissions (from 0.98 g N2O-N m−2 in urea alone to 0.15 g N2O-N m−2 in urea + Piadin and from 0.81 g N2O-N m−2 in UAN alone to 0.39 g N2O-N m−2 in UAN + Piadin) by inhibiting the conversion of NH4+ to NO3−. However, although Piadin was found to be an effective nitrification inhibitor, the risk of higher NH3 emissions (from 3.0 g NH3-N m−2 in urea alone to 4.5 g NH3-N m−2 in urea + Piadin) with the addition of Piadin cannot be neglected in environmental and economical evaluations.

Highlights

  • Large-scale inputs of nitrogen (N) fertilizers in agriculture have increased crop yields worldwide, allowing global agricultural production to keep pace with the rapidly growing population (Burney et al, 2010)

  • A common urea-containing fertilizer is urea ammonium nitrate (UAN), which is a liquid N fertilizer consisting of 50% urea and 50% ammonium nitrate and ranging from 28% to 32% N by weight

  • Before irrigation (

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Summary

Introduction

Large-scale inputs of nitrogen (N) fertilizers in agriculture have increased crop yields worldwide, allowing global agricultural production to keep pace with the rapidly growing population (Burney et al, 2010). The global use of N fertilizers is unlikely to decrease while the world’s population continues to increase (Bakken and Frostegard, 2017; van Beek et al, 2010). The most widely used synthetic N fertilizers are urea and urea-containing N fertilizers. Urea accounts for about 56% of the global production of N fertilizers (Bremner, 2007; International Fertilizer Industry Association, 2013; Suter et al, 2016). A common urea-containing fertilizer is urea ammonium nitrate (UAN), which is a liquid N fertilizer consisting of 50% urea and 50% ammonium nitrate and ranging from 28% to 32% N by weight

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