Fertilizer stabilizers reduce nitrous oxide emissions from agricultural soil by targeting microbial nitrogen transformations.

Sci Total Environ

State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, Engineering Research Center of Plant Growth Regulator, Ministry of Education, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China. Electronic address:

Published: February 2022

Nitrous oxide (NO) is a pollutant released from agriculture soils following N fertilizer application. N stabilizers, such as N-(n-butyl) thiophosphoric triamide (NBPT) and 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) could mitigate these NO emissions when applied with fertilizer. Here, field experiments were conducted to investigate the microbial mechanisms by which NBPT and DMPP mitigate NO emissions following urea application. We determined dynamic NO emissions and inorganic N concentrations for two wheat seasons and combined this with metagenomic sequencing. Application of NBPT, DMPP, and both NBPT and DMPP together with urea decreased mean NO accumulative emissions by 77.8, 91.4 and 90.7%, respectively, compared with urea application alone, mainly via repressing the increase in NO concentration after N fertilization. Sequencing results indicated that urea application enriched microorganisms that were positively correlated with NO production, whereas N stabilizers enriched microorganisms that were negatively correlated with NO production. Furthermore, compared to urea application alone, NBPT with urea reduced the abundances of genes related to denitrification, including napA/nasA, nirS/nirK, and norBC, resulting in a higher soil NO pool. Conversely, DMPP application, either alone or together with NBPT, decreased the abundance of genes involved in ammonia oxidation and denitrification, including amoCAB, hao, napA/nasA, nirS/nirK, and norBC, and maintained a greater soil NH pool. Both N stabilizers resulted in similar abundances of nirABD-which is related to NO reducers-as when no N fertilizer was applied, which could prevent NO accumulation, consequently mitigating NO emissions. These findings suggest that the high effectiveness of N stabilizers on mitigating NO emissions could be attributed to changes to soil microbial communities and N-cycling functional genes to control the by-product or intermediate products of microbial N-cycling processes in agricultural soils.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151225DOI Listing

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