5 results on '"Shuwei Liu"'
Search Results
2. Data‐driven estimates of fertilizer‐induced soil NH 3 , NO and N 2 O emissions from croplands in China and their climate change impacts
- Author
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Ruoya Ma, Shuqi Xiao, Jianwen Zou, Philippe Ciais, Shuwei Liu, Kai Yu, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement [Gif-sur-Yvette] (LSCE), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Jiangsu Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Fund, JASTIF: JASTIF‐CX(21)3007, National Natural Science Foundation of China, NSFC: 42077080, Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province for Distinguished Young Scholars: BK20200024, and This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42077080), Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province for Distinguished Young Scholars (BK20200024), and Jiangsu Agriculture Science and Technology Innovation Fund [JASTIF‐CX(21)3007]. We are grateful to many researchers who measured soil NH, NO and NO fluxes and other target parameters. Their work is the basis of the present data integration and extrapolation. 3 2
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emission factor ,Reactive nitrogen ,[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes ,Climate change ,reactive nitrogen ,engineering.material ,nitrogen use efficiency ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Environmental protection ,Environmental Chemistry ,General Environmental Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Global warming ,Nitrous oxide ,fertilizer ,Manure ,climate change ,chemistry ,Agriculture ,Soil water ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Fertilizer ,business - Abstract
International audience; Gaseous reactive nitrogen (Nr) emissions from agricultural soils to the atmosphere constitute an integral part of global N cycle, directly or indirectly causing climate change impacts. The extensive use of N fertilizer in crop production will compromise our efforts to reduce agricultural Nr emissions in China. A national inventory of fertilizer N-induced gaseous Nr emissions from croplands in China remains to be developed to reveal its role in shaping climate change. Here we present a data-driven estimate of fertilizer N-induced soil Nr emissions based on regional and crop-specific emission factors (EFs) compiled from 379 manipulative studies. In China, agricultural soil Nr emissions from the use of synthetic N fertilizer and manure in 2018 are estimated to be 3.81 and 0.73 Tg N yr−1, with a combined contribution of 23%, 20% and 15% to the global agricultural emission total of ammonia (NH3), nitrous oxide (N2O) and nitric oxide (NO), respectively. Over the past three decades, NH3 volatilization from croplands has experienced a shift from a rapid increase to a decline trend, whereas N2O and NO emissions always maintain a strong growth momentum due to a robust and continuous rise of EFs. Regionally, croplands in Central south (1.51 Tg N yr−1) and East (0.99 Tg N yr−1) of China exhibit as hotspots of soil Nr emissions. In terms of crop-specific emissions, rice, maize and vegetable show as three leading Nr emitters, together accounting for 61% of synthetic N fertilizer-induced Nr emissions from croplands. The global warming effect derived from cropland N2O emissions in China was found to dominate over the local cooling effects of NH3 and NO emissions. Our established regional and crop-specific EFs for gaseous Nr forms provide a new benchmark for constraining the IPCC Tier 1 default EF values. The spatio-temporal insight into soil Nr emission data from N fertilizer application in our estimate is expected to advance our efforts towards more accurate global or regional cropland Nr emission inventories and effective mitigation strategies.
- Published
- 2021
3. Increased soil release of greenhouse gases shrinks terrestrial carbon uptake enhancement under warming
- Author
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Jianwen Zou, Yiqi Luo, Kai Yu, Shuqing Li, Shuqi Xiao, Jinyang Wang, Zhaoqiang Han, Ruoya Ma, Shuang Wu, Shuwei Liu, Yajing Zheng, and Zhaofu Li
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Nitrous Oxide ,Climate change ,Atmospheric sciences ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Methane ,Soil respiration ,Greenhouse Gases ,Soil ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecosystem ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,Soil organic matter ,Nitrous oxide ,Carbon Dioxide ,Carbon ,chemistry ,Greenhouse gas ,Soil water ,Environmental science - Abstract
Warming can accelerate the decomposition of soil organic matter and stimulate the release of soil greenhouse gases (GHGs), but to what extent soil release of methane (CH4 ) and nitrous oxide (N2 O) may contribute to soil C loss for driving climate change under warming remains unresolved. By synthesizing 1,845 measurements from 164 peer-reviewed publications, we show that around 1.5°C (1.16-2.01°C) of experimental warming significantly stimulates soil respiration by 12.9%, N2 O emissions by 35.2%, CH4 emissions by 23.4% from rice paddies, and by 37.5% from natural wetlands. Rising temperature increases CH4 uptake of upland soils by 13.8%. Warming-enhanced emission of soil CH4 and N2 O corresponds to an overall source strength of 1.19, 1.84, and 3.12 Pg CO2 -equivalent/year under 1°C, 1.5°C, and 2°C warming scenarios, respectively, interacting with soil C loss of 1.60 Pg CO2 /year in terms of contribution to climate change. The warming-induced rise in soil CH4 and N2 O emissions (1.84 Pg CO2 -equivalent/year) could reduce mitigation potential of terrestrial net ecosystem production by 8.3% (NEP, 22.25 Pg CO2 /year) under warming. Soil respiration and CH4 release are intensified following the mean warming threshold of 1.5°C scenario, as compared to soil CH4 uptake and N2 O release with a reduced and less positive response, respectively. Soil C loss increases to a larger extent under soil warming than under canopy air warming. Warming-raised emission of soil GHG increases with the intensity of temperature rise but decreases with the extension of experimental duration. This synthesis takes the lead to quantify the ecosystem C and N cycling in response to warming and advances our capacity to predict terrestrial feedback to climate change under projected warming scenarios.
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- 2020
4. A meta-analysis of fertilizer-induced soil NO and combined NO+N2O emissions
- Author
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Feng Lin, Jianwen Zou, Shuang Wu, Cheng Ji, Yaguo Jin, Yi Sun, Shuqing Li, Shuwei Liu, and Zhaofu Li
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Global and Planetary Change ,Crop residue ,Irrigation ,Ecology ,Ammonium nitrate ,chemistry.chemical_element ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,010501 environmental sciences ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,Nitrogen ,Tillage ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Soil water ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,engineering ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Nitrification ,Fertilizer ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Soils are among the important sources of atmospheric nitric oxide (NO) and nitrous oxide (N2O), acting as a critical role in atmospheric chemistry. Updated data derived from 114 peer-reviewed publications with 520 field measurements were synthesized using meta-analysis procedure to examine the N fertilizer-induced soil NO and the combined with N2O (NO+N2O) emissions across global soils. Besides factors identified in earlier reviews, additional factors responsible for NO fluxes were fertilizer type, soil C/N ratio, crop residue incorporation, tillage, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration, drought and biomass burning. When averaged across all measurements, soil NO-N fluxes were estimated to be 4.06 kg ha−1 yr−1, with the greatest (9.75 kg ha−1 yr−1) in vegetable croplands and the lowest (0.11 kg ha−1 yr−1) in rice paddies. Soil NO emissions were more enhanced by synthetic N fertilizer (+38%), relative to organic (+20%) or mixed N (+18%) sources. Compared with synthetic N fertilizer alone, synthetic N fertilizer combined with nitrification inhibitors substantially reduced soil NO emissions by 81%. The global mean direct emission factors of N fertilizer for NO (EFNO) and combined NO+N2O (EFc) were estimated to be 1.16% and 2.58%, with 95% confidence intervals of 0.71–1.61% and 1.81–3.35%, respectively. Forests had the greatest EFNO (2.39%). Within the croplands, the EFNO (1.71%) and EFc (4.13%) were the greatest in vegetable cropping fields. Among different chemical N fertilizer varieties, ammonium nitrate had the greatest EFNO (2.93%) and EFc (5.97%). Some options such as organic instead of synthetic N fertilizer, decreasing N fertilizer input rate, nitrification inhibitor, and low irrigation frequency could be adopted to mitigate soil NO emissions. More field measurements over multi-years are highly needed to minimize the estimate uncertainties and mitigate soil NO emissions, particularly in forests and vegetable croplands. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2016
5. Changes in fertilizer-induced direct N2O emissions from paddy fields during rice-growing season in China between 1950s and 1990s
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Genxing Pan, Qiaohui Liu, Yao Huang, Qirong Shen, Yanmei Qin, Yanyu Lu, Jianwen Zou, and Shuwei Liu
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Global and Planetary Change ,Irrigation ,Ecology ,business.industry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Growing season ,Nitrous oxide ,engineering.material ,Nitrogen ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Agriculture ,Greenhouse gas ,engineering ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Paddy field ,Fertilizer ,business ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Nitrogen fertilizer-induced direct nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions depend on water regimes in paddy fields, such as seasonal continuous flooding (F), flooding‐midseason drainage‐reflooding (F-D-F), and flooding‐midseason drainage‐reflooding‐moist intermittent irrigation but without water logging (F-D-F-M). In order to estimate the changes in direct N2O emission from paddy fields during the rice-growing season in Mainland of China between the 1950s and the 1990s, the country-specific emission factors of N2O-N under different water regimes combined with rice production data were adopted in the present study. Census statistics on rice production showed that water management and nitrogen input regimes have changed in rice paddies since the 1950s. During the 1950s‐ 1970s, about 20‐25% of the rice paddy was continuously waterlogged, and 75‐80% under the water regime of F-D-F. Since the 1980s, about 12‐16%, 77%, and 7‐12% of paddy fields were under the water regimes of F, F-D-F, and F-D-F-M, respectively. Total nitrogen input during the rice-growing season has increased from 87.5kgNha � 1 in the 1950s to 224.6kgNha � 1 in the 1990s. The emission factors of N2O-N were estimated to be 0.02%, 0.42%, and 0.73% for rice paddies under the F, F-D-F, and F-D-F-M water regimes, respectively. Seasonal N2O emissions have increased from 9.6Gg N2O-N each year in the 1950s to 32.3Gg N2O-N in the 1990s, which is accompanied by the increase in rice yield over the period 1950s‐1990s. The uncertainties in N2O estimate were estimated to be 59.8% in the 1950s and 37.5% in the 1990s. In the 1990s, N2O emissions during the ricegrowing season accounted for 8‐11% of the reported annual total of N2O emissions from croplands in China, suggesting that paddy rice development could have contributed to mitigating agricultural N2O emissions in the past decades. However, seasonal N2O emissions would be increased, given that saving-water irrigation and nitrogen inputs are increasingly adopted in rice paddies in China.
- Published
- 2009
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