1. Orthophosphate enhances N2O production from aerobic hydroxylamine decomposition: implications to N2O emissions from nitrification in ornithogenic and manure-fertilized soils.
- Author
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Song, Min Joon, Yoon, Hyun, Lee, Tae-Kwon, Kwon, Miye, and Yoon, Sukhwan
- Subjects
ORTHOPHOSPHATES ,NITRIFICATION ,SOILS ,ANIMAL waste ,AMMONIA-oxidizing bacteria ,MANURES ,GRASSLAND soils - Abstract
Soils affected by animal wastes have simultaneously high N and P contents. Despite the reports of high nitrous oxide (N
2 O) emissions in such environments, the role that P plays in N2 O dynamics has not yet been systematically investigated. Here, we report the enhancement effect of orthophosphate (PO4 3− -P) abundance on N2 O yields from abiotic NH2 OH decomposition, which may have substantial implications to N2 O emissions from nitrification in such P-rich soils. The axenic cultures of Nitrosomonas europaea, an ammonia-oxidizing bacterium previously reported to leak NH2 OH, exhibited significantly higher N2 O yields when incubated at higher PO4 3− -P concentrations. As NH4 + -to-NO2 − turnover and growth rates were unaffected even at the highest PO4 3− -P concentration examined, the abiotic interaction between extracellularly released NH2 OH and PO4 3− -P was the most plausible mechanism of enhanced N2 O emission in these nitrifier cultures. This proposed mechanism was supported by the results of abiotic NH2 OH incubation whereby higher PO4 3− -P concentration resulted in higher N2 O yield. Orthophosphate enhancement of NH2 OH-to-N2 O turnover was then simulated with addition of 5 μmol NH2 OH to an ornithogenic soil with high PO4 3− -P content (23.9 ± 6.7 g/kg wet soil) and active nitrification activity after sterilization. The N2 O yield, 69.0 ± 4.6%, was significantly higher than the N2 O yields for other examined soils with lower PO4 3− -P contents (0–1.94 g/kg wet soil), and the PO4 3− -P contents of the examined soils exhibited strong correlation with the N2 O yields. These findings suggest that N2 O production from nitrification via abiotic turnover of released NH2 OH may be a consequential mechanism of N2 O emissions in PO4 3− -P-rich soils. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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