Fertilization regimes and the nitrification process in paddy soils: Lessons for agricultural sustainability from a meta-analysis

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Xiangtian Meng
  • Haiyang Yu
  • Xuechen Zhang
  • Yaying Li
  • Kazem Zamanien
  • Huaiying Yao

Organisationseinheiten

Externe Organisationen

  • Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)
  • Haixi Institutes of Chinese Academy of Sciences and People's Government of Beilun District
  • Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University
  • Wuhan Institute of Technology
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer104844
FachzeitschriftApplied soil ecology
Jahrgang186
Frühes Online-Datum20 Feb. 2023
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Juni 2023

Abstract

Increasing evidence shows that fertilization plays a key role in improving nitrogen (N) storage and increasing N supply capacity in paddy soils. How fertilizer regimes (N application rate, substitution rate, and fertilizer type) and environmental variables (soil pH and SOM) affect N pools, nitrification processes (abundance of nitrifying microorganisms, nitrification rate), and N losses (NH3 volatilization and N2O emission) in paddy soils is still unclear. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis by compiling a total of 1307 individual experimental observations from 64 peer-reviewed publications to evaluate the impacts of N fertilization with other amendments (manure, biochar, or nitrification inhibitors) on the abovementioned paddy soil N sequestration and turnover. Overall, fertilization increased N pools (total N, NH4+-N, and NO3-N content) and the abundance of main nitrifying microorganisms (AOA and AOB) by 7.3 % to 51.4 % and 70.3 % to 146.9 % in paddy soil, respectively, while stimulating NH3 volatilization and N2O emissions by 277.3 % and 149.7 %, respectively. The increased N losses following fertilization were positively correlated with the expansion of paddy soil N pools. In particular, the substitution of organic fertilizer for chemical fertilizer at 30 % to 70 % had a better effect on elevating soil N sequestration, while a substitution rate of >70 % reduced N losses. Moreover, the application of biochar and nitrification inhibitors was conducive to increasing total N, NH4+-N, and NH3 volatilization and reducing N2O emissions in fertilized paddy soils. Our findings indicated that fertilization regimes substantially stimulated N pools and N losses in paddy ecosystems. Thus, to avoid environmental and economic consequences, the optimization of N management and adjusting soil properties should be considered to increase N use efficiency and suppress N losses.

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Fertilization regimes and the nitrification process in paddy soils: Lessons for agricultural sustainability from a meta-analysis. / Meng, Xiangtian; Yu, Haiyang; Zhang, Xuechen et al.
in: Applied soil ecology, Jahrgang 186, 104844, 06.2023.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Meng X, Yu H, Zhang X, Li Y, Zamanien K, Yao H. Fertilization regimes and the nitrification process in paddy soils: Lessons for agricultural sustainability from a meta-analysis. Applied soil ecology. 2023 Jun;186:104844. Epub 2023 Feb 20. doi: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2023.104844
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abstract = "Increasing evidence shows that fertilization plays a key role in improving nitrogen (N) storage and increasing N supply capacity in paddy soils. How fertilizer regimes (N application rate, substitution rate, and fertilizer type) and environmental variables (soil pH and SOM) affect N pools, nitrification processes (abundance of nitrifying microorganisms, nitrification rate), and N losses (NH3 volatilization and N2O emission) in paddy soils is still unclear. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis by compiling a total of 1307 individual experimental observations from 64 peer-reviewed publications to evaluate the impacts of N fertilization with other amendments (manure, biochar, or nitrification inhibitors) on the abovementioned paddy soil N sequestration and turnover. Overall, fertilization increased N pools (total N, NH4+-N, and NO3−-N content) and the abundance of main nitrifying microorganisms (AOA and AOB) by 7.3 % to 51.4 % and 70.3 % to 146.9 % in paddy soil, respectively, while stimulating NH3 volatilization and N2O emissions by 277.3 % and 149.7 %, respectively. The increased N losses following fertilization were positively correlated with the expansion of paddy soil N pools. In particular, the substitution of organic fertilizer for chemical fertilizer at 30 % to 70 % had a better effect on elevating soil N sequestration, while a substitution rate of >70 % reduced N losses. Moreover, the application of biochar and nitrification inhibitors was conducive to increasing total N, NH4+-N, and NH3 volatilization and reducing N2O emissions in fertilized paddy soils. Our findings indicated that fertilization regimes substantially stimulated N pools and N losses in paddy ecosystems. Thus, to avoid environmental and economic consequences, the optimization of N management and adjusting soil properties should be considered to increase N use efficiency and suppress N losses.",
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note = "Funding Information: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China ( 42077036 , 42021005 ), the National Key R & D Program of China ( 2020YFC1806900 ), and Ningbo Municipal Science and Technology Bureau ( 202002N3079 ). Sincere thanks go to the anonymous reviewers and editors for helping us strengthen our manuscript. ",
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Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fertilization regimes and the nitrification process in paddy soils

T2 - Lessons for agricultural sustainability from a meta-analysis

AU - Meng, Xiangtian

AU - Yu, Haiyang

AU - Zhang, Xuechen

AU - Li, Yaying

AU - Zamanien, Kazem

AU - Yao, Huaiying

N1 - Funding Information: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China ( 42077036 , 42021005 ), the National Key R & D Program of China ( 2020YFC1806900 ), and Ningbo Municipal Science and Technology Bureau ( 202002N3079 ). Sincere thanks go to the anonymous reviewers and editors for helping us strengthen our manuscript.

PY - 2023/6

Y1 - 2023/6

N2 - Increasing evidence shows that fertilization plays a key role in improving nitrogen (N) storage and increasing N supply capacity in paddy soils. How fertilizer regimes (N application rate, substitution rate, and fertilizer type) and environmental variables (soil pH and SOM) affect N pools, nitrification processes (abundance of nitrifying microorganisms, nitrification rate), and N losses (NH3 volatilization and N2O emission) in paddy soils is still unclear. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis by compiling a total of 1307 individual experimental observations from 64 peer-reviewed publications to evaluate the impacts of N fertilization with other amendments (manure, biochar, or nitrification inhibitors) on the abovementioned paddy soil N sequestration and turnover. Overall, fertilization increased N pools (total N, NH4+-N, and NO3−-N content) and the abundance of main nitrifying microorganisms (AOA and AOB) by 7.3 % to 51.4 % and 70.3 % to 146.9 % in paddy soil, respectively, while stimulating NH3 volatilization and N2O emissions by 277.3 % and 149.7 %, respectively. The increased N losses following fertilization were positively correlated with the expansion of paddy soil N pools. In particular, the substitution of organic fertilizer for chemical fertilizer at 30 % to 70 % had a better effect on elevating soil N sequestration, while a substitution rate of >70 % reduced N losses. Moreover, the application of biochar and nitrification inhibitors was conducive to increasing total N, NH4+-N, and NH3 volatilization and reducing N2O emissions in fertilized paddy soils. Our findings indicated that fertilization regimes substantially stimulated N pools and N losses in paddy ecosystems. Thus, to avoid environmental and economic consequences, the optimization of N management and adjusting soil properties should be considered to increase N use efficiency and suppress N losses.

AB - Increasing evidence shows that fertilization plays a key role in improving nitrogen (N) storage and increasing N supply capacity in paddy soils. How fertilizer regimes (N application rate, substitution rate, and fertilizer type) and environmental variables (soil pH and SOM) affect N pools, nitrification processes (abundance of nitrifying microorganisms, nitrification rate), and N losses (NH3 volatilization and N2O emission) in paddy soils is still unclear. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis by compiling a total of 1307 individual experimental observations from 64 peer-reviewed publications to evaluate the impacts of N fertilization with other amendments (manure, biochar, or nitrification inhibitors) on the abovementioned paddy soil N sequestration and turnover. Overall, fertilization increased N pools (total N, NH4+-N, and NO3−-N content) and the abundance of main nitrifying microorganisms (AOA and AOB) by 7.3 % to 51.4 % and 70.3 % to 146.9 % in paddy soil, respectively, while stimulating NH3 volatilization and N2O emissions by 277.3 % and 149.7 %, respectively. The increased N losses following fertilization were positively correlated with the expansion of paddy soil N pools. In particular, the substitution of organic fertilizer for chemical fertilizer at 30 % to 70 % had a better effect on elevating soil N sequestration, while a substitution rate of >70 % reduced N losses. Moreover, the application of biochar and nitrification inhibitors was conducive to increasing total N, NH4+-N, and NH3 volatilization and reducing N2O emissions in fertilized paddy soils. Our findings indicated that fertilization regimes substantially stimulated N pools and N losses in paddy ecosystems. Thus, to avoid environmental and economic consequences, the optimization of N management and adjusting soil properties should be considered to increase N use efficiency and suppress N losses.

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