N2O, NH3 and NOx emissions as a function of urea granule size and soil type under aerobic conditions

被引:15
|
作者
Khalil, M. I. [1 ]
Schmidhalter, U.
Gutser, R.
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, Inst Plant Nutr, Dept Plant Sci, D-85350 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[2] Bangladesh Inst Nucl Agr, Soil Sci Div, Mymensingh 2200, Bangladesh
来源
WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION | 2006年 / 175卷 / 1-4期
关键词
field capacity; gaseous N emission; n transformation; soil type; agricultural fertilizer;
D O I
10.1007/s11270-006-9117-y
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
We examined the influence of various urea granule sizes (< 2, 7.0, 9.9 and 12.7 mm) applied into a silt loam soil (experiment 1) and soil types (sandy, silt and clay loam) treated with the largest granule (experiment 2) on gaseous N loss (except N-2) at field capacity. The prilled urea (PU) was mixed into the soil whereas the urea granules were point-placed at a 5.0-cm depth. For experiment 1, N2O emission was enhanced with increasing granule size, ranging from 0.17-0.50% of the added N during the 45-day incubation period. In the case of experiment 2, the sandy loam soil (0.59%) behaved similarly with the silt loam (0.53%) but both showed remarkably lower emissions than were found for the clay loam soil (2.61%). Both nitrification and N2O emissions were delayed by several days with increasing granule size, and the latter was influenced by mineral N, soil water and pH. By contrast, the NH3 volatilization decreased with increasing granule size, implying the inhibition of urease activity by urea concentration gradients. Considering both experimental results, the NH3 loss was highest for the PU-treated (1.73%) and the larger granules regardless of soil type did not emit more than 0.27% of the added N over 22 days, possibly because the high concentrations of either mineral N or NH4+ in the soil surface layer (0-2.5 cm) and the high H+ buffering capacity might regulate the NH3 emission. Similar to the pattern of NH3 loss, NOx emission was noticeably higher for the PU-treated soil (0.97%) than for the larger granule sizes (0.09-0.29%), which were the highest for the sandy and clay loam soils. Positional differences in the concentration of mineral N and nitrification also influenced the NOx emission. As such, total NH3 loss was proportional to total NOx emission, indicating similar influence of soil and environmental conditions on both. Pooled total N2O, NH3 and NOx emission data suggest that the PU-treated soil could induce greater gaseous N loss over larger urea granules, largely in the form of NH3 and NOx emissions, whereas a similar increase with the largest granule size was mainly due to the total N2O flux.
引用
收藏
页码:127 / 148
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Soil N2O emissions under conventional tillage conditions and from forest soil
    Sosulski, Tomasz
    Szara, Ewa
    Szymanska, Magdalena
    Stepien, Wojciech
    Rutkowska, Beata
    Szulc, Wieslaw
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2019, 190 : 86 - 91
  • [32] Nitrogen sources and application rates affect emissions of N2O and NH3 in sugarcane
    Manoel Degaspari, Iracema Alves
    Soares, Johnny Rodrigues
    Montezano, Zaqueu Fernando
    Del Grosso, Stephen J.
    Vitti, Andre Cesar
    Rossetto, Raffaella
    Cantarella, Heitor
    NUTRIENT CYCLING IN AGROECOSYSTEMS, 2020, 116 (03) : 329 - 344
  • [33] Nitrogen sources and application rates affect emissions of N2O and NH3 in sugarcane
    Iracema Alves Manoel Degaspari
    Johnny Rodrigues Soares
    Zaqueu Fernando Montezano
    Stephen J. Del Grosso
    André Cesar Vitti
    Raffaella Rossetto
    Heitor Cantarella
    Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems, 2020, 116 : 329 - 344
  • [34] Strategies for the use of urease and nitrification inhibitors with urea: Impact on N2O and NH3 emissions, fertilizer-15N recovery and maize yield in a tropical soil
    Martins, M. R.
    Sant'Anna, S. A. C.
    Zaman, M.
    Santos, R. C.
    Monteiro, R. C.
    Alves, B. J. R.
    Jantalia, C. P.
    Boddey, R. M.
    Urquiaga, S.
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 247 : 54 - 62
  • [35] Global air emission inventories for anthropogenic sources of NOx, NH3 and N2O in 1990
    Olivier, JGJ
    Bouwman, AF
    Van der Hoek, KW
    Berdowski, JJM
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 1998, 102 : 135 - 148
  • [36] Global air emission inventories for anthropogenic sources of NOx, NH3 and N2O in 1990
    Olivier, JGJ
    Bouwman, AF
    Van der Hoek, KW
    Berdowski, JJM
    NITROGEN, THE CONFER-N-S, 1998, : 135 - 148
  • [37] High resolution short-term investigation of soil CO2, N2O, NOx and NH3 emissions after different chabazite zeolite amendments
    Ferretti, Giacomo
    Keiblinger, Katharina M.
    Zimmermann, Michael
    Di Giuseppe, Dario
    Faccini, Barbara
    Colombani, Nicolo
    Mentler, Axel
    Zechmeister-Boltenstern, Sophie
    Coltorti, Massimo
    Mastrocicco, Micol
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2017, 119 : 138 - 144
  • [38] The formation of N2O during the reduction of NO by NH3
    Hou, Xiangsong
    Zhang, Hai
    Pilawska, Malgorzata
    Lu, Junfu
    Yue, Guangxi
    FUEL, 2008, 87 (15-16) : 3271 - 3277
  • [39] The relationship between NH3 emissions from a poultry farm and soil NO and N2O fluxes from a downwind forest
    Skiba, U.
    Dick, J.
    Storeton-West, R.
    Lopez-Fernandez, S.
    Woods, C.
    Tang, S.
    vanDijk, N.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2006, 3 (03) : 375 - 382
  • [40] Experimental study on the influence of operating parameters on NOx and N2O emissions during co-firing of NH3 and coal in a CFB
    Li, Kun
    Cheng, Leming
    Zhang, Qingyu
    Zhao, Xin
    Ma, Zhangke
    Zhang, Weiguo
    JOURNAL OF THE ENERGY INSTITUTE, 2024, 115