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Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices

Chronic amendment of agricultural soil with synthetic nitrogen fertilization and/or livestock manure has been demonstrated to enhance the feedback intensity of net N(2)O emission to temperature variation (i.e., temperature sensitivity, TS). Yet few studies have explored the relevance of changes in u...

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Autores principales: Yin, Chang, Fan, Xiaoping, Yan, Guochao, Chen, Hao, Ye, Mujun, Ni, Liang, Peng, Hongyun, Ran, Wei, Zhao, Yuhua, Li, Tingqiang, Wakelin, Steven A., Liang, Yongchao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7198778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32411109
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00745
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author Yin, Chang
Fan, Xiaoping
Yan, Guochao
Chen, Hao
Ye, Mujun
Ni, Liang
Peng, Hongyun
Ran, Wei
Zhao, Yuhua
Li, Tingqiang
Wakelin, Steven A.
Liang, Yongchao
author_facet Yin, Chang
Fan, Xiaoping
Yan, Guochao
Chen, Hao
Ye, Mujun
Ni, Liang
Peng, Hongyun
Ran, Wei
Zhao, Yuhua
Li, Tingqiang
Wakelin, Steven A.
Liang, Yongchao
author_sort Yin, Chang
collection PubMed
description Chronic amendment of agricultural soil with synthetic nitrogen fertilization and/or livestock manure has been demonstrated to enhance the feedback intensity of net N(2)O emission to temperature variation (i.e., temperature sensitivity, TS). Yet few studies have explored the relevance of changes in underlying gross N(2)O production and consumption processes toward explaining this phenomenon, in particular for the latter. Furthermore, the microbe-based mechanisms associated with the variation of N(2)O consumption process remain largely unexplored. To address this knowledge gap, a temperature- (15, 25, and 35°C) and moisture-controlled (50% water holding capacity) microcosm incubation experiment was established using an arable soil subject to long-term addition of synthetic fertilizer (NPK), a mixture of synthetic fertilizer with livestock manure (MNPK), or with no fertilizer treatment (CT). Over the incubation time period, the C(2)H(2) inhibition method was adopted to monitor reaction rates of gross N(2)O production and consumption; the population sizes and community structures of nosZI- and nosZII-N(2)O reducers were analyzed using quantitative PCR (Q-PCR) and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP). The results indicated that only NPK significantly increased the TS of net N(2)O emission, and gross N(2)O consumption process consistently occurred under all treatment combinations (temperature and fertilization) at each sampling time point. The responses of gross N(2)O production and consumption processes to temperature elevation exhibited fertilization- and sampling time-dependent pattern, and the higher net N(2)O production TS in the NPK treatment was underlain by its higher TS of gross production process and insensitivity of gross consumption process to temperature. The size and structure of nosZII-N(2)O reducers, as well as the community structure of nosZI-N(2)O reducers, were positively correlated with variation of gross N(2)O production and consumption rates across all fertilization regimes. NosZII-N(2)O reducer abundance was less responsive to temperature change, and its community structure less susceptible to fertilization, as compared with nosZI-N(2)O reducers. Overall, our results demonstrate that the TS of the gross N(2)O production process, not gross consumption, is the key step regulating the TS of net N(2)O production, and both nosZI- and nosZII-N(2)O clades are likely active N(2)O reducers in the tested soil.
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spelling pubmed-71987782020-05-14 Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices Yin, Chang Fan, Xiaoping Yan, Guochao Chen, Hao Ye, Mujun Ni, Liang Peng, Hongyun Ran, Wei Zhao, Yuhua Li, Tingqiang Wakelin, Steven A. Liang, Yongchao Front Microbiol Microbiology Chronic amendment of agricultural soil with synthetic nitrogen fertilization and/or livestock manure has been demonstrated to enhance the feedback intensity of net N(2)O emission to temperature variation (i.e., temperature sensitivity, TS). Yet few studies have explored the relevance of changes in underlying gross N(2)O production and consumption processes toward explaining this phenomenon, in particular for the latter. Furthermore, the microbe-based mechanisms associated with the variation of N(2)O consumption process remain largely unexplored. To address this knowledge gap, a temperature- (15, 25, and 35°C) and moisture-controlled (50% water holding capacity) microcosm incubation experiment was established using an arable soil subject to long-term addition of synthetic fertilizer (NPK), a mixture of synthetic fertilizer with livestock manure (MNPK), or with no fertilizer treatment (CT). Over the incubation time period, the C(2)H(2) inhibition method was adopted to monitor reaction rates of gross N(2)O production and consumption; the population sizes and community structures of nosZI- and nosZII-N(2)O reducers were analyzed using quantitative PCR (Q-PCR) and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP). The results indicated that only NPK significantly increased the TS of net N(2)O emission, and gross N(2)O consumption process consistently occurred under all treatment combinations (temperature and fertilization) at each sampling time point. The responses of gross N(2)O production and consumption processes to temperature elevation exhibited fertilization- and sampling time-dependent pattern, and the higher net N(2)O production TS in the NPK treatment was underlain by its higher TS of gross production process and insensitivity of gross consumption process to temperature. The size and structure of nosZII-N(2)O reducers, as well as the community structure of nosZI-N(2)O reducers, were positively correlated with variation of gross N(2)O production and consumption rates across all fertilization regimes. NosZII-N(2)O reducer abundance was less responsive to temperature change, and its community structure less susceptible to fertilization, as compared with nosZI-N(2)O reducers. Overall, our results demonstrate that the TS of the gross N(2)O production process, not gross consumption, is the key step regulating the TS of net N(2)O production, and both nosZI- and nosZII-N(2)O clades are likely active N(2)O reducers in the tested soil. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7198778/ /pubmed/32411109 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00745 Text en Copyright © 2020 Yin, Fan, Yan, Chen, Ye, Ni, Peng, Ran, Zhao, Li, Wakelin and Liang. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Yin, Chang
Fan, Xiaoping
Yan, Guochao
Chen, Hao
Ye, Mujun
Ni, Liang
Peng, Hongyun
Ran, Wei
Zhao, Yuhua
Li, Tingqiang
Wakelin, Steven A.
Liang, Yongchao
Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices
title Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices
title_full Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices
title_fullStr Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices
title_full_unstemmed Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices
title_short Gross N(2)O Production Process, Not Consumption, Determines the Temperature Sensitivity of Net N(2)O Emission in Arable Soil Subject to Different Long-Term Fertilization Practices
title_sort gross n(2)o production process, not consumption, determines the temperature sensitivity of net n(2)o emission in arable soil subject to different long-term fertilization practices
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7198778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32411109
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00745
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