AOB Nitrosospira cluster 3a.2 (D11) dominates N2O emissions in fertilised agricultural soils.

Na Deng, Cecile Gubry-Rangin, Xiao-Tong Song, Xiao-Tang Ju, Si-Yi Liu, Ju Pei Shen, Hong-jie Di, Li-Li Han, Li-Mei Zhang* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Ammonia-oxidation process directly contribute to soil nitrous oxide (N 2O) emissions in agricultural soils. However, taxonomy of the key nitrifiers (within ammonia oxidising bacteria (AOB), archaea (AOA) and complete ammonia oxidisers (comammox Nitrospira)) responsible for substantial N 2O emissions in agricultural soils is unknown, as is their regulation by soil biotic and abiotic factors. In this study, cumulative N 2O emissions, nitrification rates, abundance and community structure of nitrifiers were investigated in 16 agricultural soils from major crop production regions of China using microcosm experiments with amended nitrogen (N) supplemented or not with a nitrification inhibitor (nitrapyrin). Key nitrifier groups involved in N 2O emissions were identified by comparative analyses of the different treatments, combining sequencing and random forest analyses. Soil cumulative N 2O emissions significantly increased with soil pH in all agricultural soils. However, they decreased with soil organic carbon (SOC) in alkaline soils. Nitrapyrin significantly inhibited soil cumulative N 2O emissions and AOB growth, with a significant inhibition of the AOB Nitrosospira cluster 3a.2 (D11) abundance. One Nitrosospira multiformis-like OTU phylotype (OTU34), which was classified within the AOB Nitrosospira cluster 3a.2 (D11), had the greatest importance on cumulative N 2O emissions and its growth significantly depended on soil pH and SOC contents, with higher growth at high pH and low SOC conditions. Collectively, our results demonstrate that alkaline soils with low SOC contents have high N 2O emissions, which were mainly driven by AOB Nitrosospira cluster 3a.2 (D11). Nitrapyrin can efficiently reduce nitrification-related N 2O emissions by inhibiting the activity of AOB Nitrosospira cluster 3a.2 (D11). This study advances our understanding of key nitrifiers responsible for high N 2O emissions in agricultural soils and their controlling factors, and provides vital knowledge for N 2O emission mitigation in agricultural ecosystems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number120504
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Environmental Management
Volume355
Early online date5 Mar 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

CRediT authorship contribution statement
Na Deng: Writing – review & editing, Methodology, Investigation, Data curation. Cecile Gubry-Rangin: Writing – review & editing, Methodology, Conceptualization. Xiao-Tong Song: Writing – review & editing, Methodology, Data curation. Xiao-Tang Ju: Writing – review & editing, Conceptualization. Si-Yi Liu: Methodology, Data curation. Ju-Pei Shen: Writing – review & editing, Data curation. Hong-jie Di: Writing – review & editing. Li-Li Han: Writing – review & editing, Methodology. Li-Mei Zhang: Writing – review & editing, Methodology, Data curation, Conceptualization.

Data Availability Statement

Data will be made available on request

Keywords

  • Soil/chemistry
  • Ecosystem
  • Ammonia/chemistry
  • Carbon
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Archaea
  • Nitrification
  • Soil Microbiology

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