Pools and Fluxes: A snapshot of nitrogen dynamics in Australian soils

Mark Farrell1, Diane Allen2, Ben Macdonald3

1 CSIRO Agriculture & Food, Adelaide, SA, 5064, mark.farrell@csiro.au

2 DSITI, Brisbane, Qld, 4001, diane.allen@dsiti.qld.gov.au

3 CSIRO Agriculture & Food, Canberra, ACT, 2601, ben.macdonald@csiro.au

Abstract

Nitrogen (N) uptake by plants has been researched for well over a century, and continues to be of central importance both from an agricultural productivity and an environmental pollution perspective. Due to its prevalence as a fertilizer, mineral N is usually the only form routinely quantified in soil fertility assessments, despite significant quantities of dissolved organic N (DON) often being present. In the present study, we collected 358 topsoil samples from 89 sites under 13 different land uses. We quantified a wide range of soil N properties including pools and fluxes of organic and inorganic N to develop a better understanding of N cycling in Australian soils. Though nitrate dominated in some land uses, DON and free amino acid-N (FAA-N) were present in significant quantities in most land uses. Rates of N cycling were rapid in most soils, with only very nutrient-poor arid zone soils having particularly low N flux rates. Further research is required to better understand the availability of DON and its accessibility to plants.

Microdialysis – a new technology for investigating soil nitrogen fluxes in the rhizosphere

Richard Brackin1, Torgny Näsholm2,3, Nicole Robinson1, Stéphane Guillou1, Kerry Vinall1, Scott Buckley1, Prakash Lakshmanan4, Susanne Schmidt1, Erich Inselsbacher5
1 School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, The University of Queensland, QLD, 4072 Brisbane, Australia; email: richard.brackin@uqconnect.edu.au

2 Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-90183 Umeå.

3 Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology, Umeå Plant Science Center, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-90183 Umeå.

4 Sugar Research Australia, 50 Meiers Road, Indooroopilly, QLD 4068 Brisbane, Australia.

5 Department of Geography and Regional Research, University of Vienna, AT-1090 Vienna, Austria.

Abstract

Extracts of soil are used to provide estimates of plant-available nitrogen sources such as nitrate, ammonium and amino acids (low molecular weight nitrogen, LMW-N). Soil extracts are a blunt tool; they introduce a number of inaccuracies through soil disturbance, and do not indicate the rapidity of N pool turnover. Microdialysis is used predominantly in neuroscience but was recently introduced in soil research. Small in situ probes cause minimal disturbance, and passive diffusion of solutes across a semi-permeable membrane allows dialysate to be collected over time allowing study of nutrient flux dynamics. This sampling mode is functionally similar to plant roots, and may provide a good estimate of the N forms available to roots. We used microdialysis to quantify induced diffusive fluxes of LMW-N in a subtropical agricultural soil under three fertiliser regimes. Shifts in LMW-N fluxes were detected over time, suggesting the formation of depletion zones around the probe surface similar to those associated with roots. A pronounced difference was observed between results from microdialysis and soil extracts. In dialysate, amino acids contributed up to 70% of LMW-N in unfertilised soil and 5-20% in fertilised soils. In contrast, amino acids were a minor constituent in soil extracts, highlighting that soil extracts underestimate amino acid availability in soils. Modelling plant N uptake based on soil N fluxes and root uptake kinetics, we show that use of inorganic N in fertilised soil was constrained by the root’s uptake. In contrast, fluxes of amino acids and the root’s uptake capacity were closely matched.

Discriminating nitrogen uptake parameters of maize cultivars with high-throughput phenotyping at the reproductive phase

Friederike Gnädinger and Urs Schmidhalter 

Chair of Plant Nutrition, Technical University of Munich (TUM), Emil-Raman-Str.2, 85354 Freising

Abstract

Yields are primarily dependent on the input of nitrogen. Since fertilization poses serious environmental concerns, better performing maize cultivars with reduced nitrogen inputs are required. The aim of this work is to develop efficient phenotyping procedures to assess differences in nitrogen uptake and nitrogen use efficiency at the reproductive stage of maize cultivars supplied with different nitrogen doses. Both, active and passive sensor systems were tested to assess such traits and the spectral information was related to destructively assessed parameters of the aboveground biomass and nitrogen uptake at flowering, kernel dough stage and at grain harvest. In general, spectral indices obtained from the hyperspectral sensor were better related to the biomass or the nitrogen uptake of maize cultivars than those obtained from active sensors. Optimized hyperspectral indices were closest related to the leaf dry biomass with R2-values of 0.55 and to the Nitrogen Nutrition Index with R= 0.77 at the kernel dough stage. PLSR models were calculated for two experimental years, using data from 2015 as calibration data set and from 2014 as validation data set and allowed to predict leaf nitrogen uptake with R2 = 0.70 and RMSE of 10.8 kg N ha-1. The phenotyping platform PhenoTrac 4 developed by TUM allowed to obtain enhanced information of the complex traits nitrogen uptake and nitrogen use efficiency. In combination with improved algorithms using both optimized indices as well as PLSR models promising results were obtained to further narrow the gap existing between genomics and phenomics.

Compost-N recovery: 15N natural abundance quantitative approach

Caio T. Inácio1, Segundo Urquiaga2, Phillip M. Chalk3

1 Embrapa Solos, Rua Jardim Botânico 1024, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, 22460-000, www.embrapa.br/solos, caio.teves@embrapa.br

2 Embrapa Agrobiologia, Rodovia BR-465 KM 7, Seropédica, RJ, 23891-000

3 University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010, Melbourne, Victoria

Abstract

The remarkable influence of organic inputs, such as manure and compost, on d15N values of growing plants suggests the possible use of 15N natural abundance as a tracer of N. Thus, using 15N natural abundance might be possible to estimate compost-N recovery as an alternative method to the use of 15N-enriched materials. The objective of this study was to verify the feasibility of using d15N value to estimate compost-N recovery by plants. Head lettuce, carrots and broccoli were cultivated (randomized blocks) in sequence under increasing levels (0 to 2.5 kg/m², dry matter) of compost application. Pearson correlations were significant and positive between plants d15N and yield (except lettuce, no yield response). A new equation for estimating compost-N recovery by plants was proposed using differences in d15N-plant with and without compost application. The compost-N recoveries were 2-8 % for lettuce, 4-9 % for carrots, and 9-18 % for broccoli. Unrealistic estimates were disregarded and assigned primarily to non-representative sampling because of intra-plant d15N variations. This study showed the theoretical and experimental basis of using d15N values to estimate compost-N recovery by test plants.

An assessment of the applicability of ambient NH3 instrumentation under field conditions

Marsailidh M. Twigg1, Christine. F. Braban1, Daiana Leuenberger2, Jari Peltola3, Andrea Pogány4 , Nils Lüttschwager4, Carlo Tiebe5, Margaret Anderson1, Nicholas Cowan1, Matthew R. Jones1, John Kentisbeer1, Sarah R. Leeson1, Neil Mullinger1, Mhairi Coyle1, Eiko Nemitz1 and Bernhard Niederhauser2,

1 NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Bush Estate, Penicuik, UK, EH26 0QB, www.ceh.ac.uk, Email: sail@ceh.ac.uk

2 Federal Institute of Metrology (METAS), Lindenweg 50, 3003 Bern-Wabern, Switzerland

3Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd, Centre for Metrology (VTT-MIKES), Tekniikantie 1, 02150 Espoo, Finland

4Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Bundesallee 100, 38116 Braunschweig, Germany

5BAM Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing, Unter den Eichen 87, 12205 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Ammonia (NH3) is an important atmospheric base which can contribute to eutrophication, acidification of ecosystems and the formation of secondary aerosols. In order to monitor potential policy driven reductions and provide information on NH3 emissions, transport and deposition, active sampling is required. There are, however, many challenges in measuring NH3 as it is a ‘sticky’ reactive molecule which is readily soluble and rapidly interacts with other trace gases to form secondary inorganic aerosols. When undertaking ambient NH3 measurements, inlet set up, use of filters, reliable calibration standards and potential chemical interferences in the analytical technique thus need particular attention. Due to these complexities of NH3 active measurements, a metrology-centred project on “Metrology for Ammonia in Ambient Air” (MetNH3) funded by the European Metrological Research Programme (EMRP), was started in 2014, with the aim of developing traceable NH3 monitoring methods and NH3 certified reference material, which will be applicable under field conditions. In this project a commercial cavity ring down instrument is being characterised and further developed to be the traceable method of choice, alongside the development of an open path absorption spectrometer.

The following study presents the first results of a field intercomparison of different NH3 instrumentation verified against traceable methods developed and characterised as part of the MetNH3 project, held in South East Scotland. In addition, the applicability of dynamic calibration systems, under field conditions which have developed within the project is assessed.  The overall objective of this study will be to establish recommendations for ambient NH3 measurements.

Effects of human activities on nitrogen flow in the rural area of the Taihu watershed in China

YanhuaWanga,c,d, ZucongCaia,c,d, Xiaoyuan Yanb, HaoYanga,c,d

aSchool of Geography Science, Nanjing Normal University, 1 Wenyuan Road, Qixia, Nanjing 210023, China;

bInstitute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy ofSciences, Nanjing 210008, China;

cJiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory of Materials Cycling and Pollution Control, Nanjing, China;

dJiangsu Center for Collaborative Innovation in Geographical Information Resource Development and Application, Nanjing, China

Abstract

Nitrogen limits primary productivity in ecosystems. To overcome this limitation and maintain food security, densely populated agricultural regions in developing nations now use synthetic nitrogen fertilizers to boost yields. However, nitrogen saturation of aquatic ecosystems was observed here and there, i.e. Taihu Lake, Dianchi Lake and lots of rivers in the watershed. Human activities have more than doubled the annual amount of reactive nitrogen (Nr) entering terrestrial ecosystems since the preindustrial era (Galloway 1998; Green et al 2004). Increased gradually Nr emitted to the atmosphere resulting in the haze, greenhouse effects, acid rain and so on. In this study, we assessed the fate of Nr in the rural area of the Taihu watershed, China. A detailed quantification of Crop Production-Livestock Breeding System (CLS) was constructed in this study. Material flow analysis method and the principle of conservation of mass were used.

Nitrogen balance and use efficiency in the Calapooia River Watershed, Oregon, United States

Jiajia Lin1, Jana Compton2, George Mueller-Warrant3, William Matthews4, Scott Leibowitz5

1 National Research Council, based at US Environmental Protection Agency, Western Ecology Division, 200 SW 35th St, Corvallis, OR 97333, Lin.jiajia@epa.gov

2 US Environmental Protection Agency, Western Ecology Division, 200 SW 35th St, Corvallis, OR 97333, Compton.Jana@epa.gov

3 US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, 3420 NW Orchard Ave, Corvallis, OR 97331, George.Mueller-Warrant@ars.usda.gov

4 Oregon Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Division, 635 Capitol St NE, Salem, OR 97301, Wmatthews@oda.state.or.us

5 US Environmental Protection Agency, Western Ecology Division, 200 SW 35th St, Corvallis, OR 97333, Leibowitz.Scott@epa.gov

Abstract

Reducing nitrogen (N) released into the environment through greater N use efficiencies (NUE) is a current challenge in watershed management. Examining N sources and sinks at local scales allows for better watershed-scale N use. We use data on land-use, CAFOs, N deposition, stream chemistry, and crop-level and county-level fertilizer use to assess the N inputs, exports and retention in the Calapooia River Watershed (CRW).  The CRW is influenced by intensive agricultural activities, mostly in grass seed crops. Our results demonstrate that fertilizer is the dominant N input on agricultural land, with an average rate of 130 kg N/ha/yr on these subwatersheds.  Deposition and alder fixation are the two main sources of N on forested land, with an average rate of <10 kg N/ha/yr.  About 50-60% of the annual hydrologic N yield occurs during wet winter and reaches 40 kg N/ha per season.  Summer TN yield is minimum, as low as <1 kg N/ha per season.  At the CRW scale, annual stream export is 19% of the total N inputs.  On average, about 41% of total N input is removed annually via crop harvest among the 58 subwatershed.  The proportion of net N input that is “retained” in Calapooia is within the same range of estimates of northeastern watersheds.  Our analysis also shows that runoff alone explains 62% of the variance in fractional N export in the U.S. watersheds.

 

Determining nitrogen removal in US sewage treatment

Lia R. Cattaneo1, Robert Bastian2, Lisa M. Colosi1, Allison M. Leach3, James N. Galloway1

 1University of Virginia, 291 McCormick Road, Charlottesville, VA, 22904 USA, lrc4yd@virginia.edu

2United States Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, D.C. 20460

3University of New Hampshire, 131 Main Street, 107 Nesmith Hall, Durham, NH, 03824 USA

Abstract

Most of the nitrogen (N) in food passes through the human body, is excreted, and enters the wastewater stream. This sewage N is an important component of the food consumption N footprint. The US N-Calculator (a per capita nitrogen footprint tool) calculates N removal from sewage by estimating the proportion of homes connected to wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) with tertiary treatment N removal technologies. However, this assumes that no N is removed in WWTPs with primary or secondary treatment or in WWTPs with tertiary treatment processes other than nitrogen removal. This paper uses a mass balance approach to revise the factor used in the US N-Calculator to better represent the N removal from sewage treatment in the US. N in wastewater can have several fates: release to the environment through septic systems, release to the environment through WWTPs, release to the environment in disposed sludge, conversion to N2 in WWTPs, and beneficial use as land-applied sludge. The national average N removal factor (55%) represents N converted to N2 or used as beneficial sludge compared with the N in wastewater. The removal from just WWTPs was 73%. The new total removal reduces the average US per capita food consumption N footprint by 2.63 kg N, resulting in a total footprint decrease of 6.7%.

Evaluation of historical global gaseous nitrogen emissions from croplands considering NH4+ and NO3- forming fertilizer species in global fertilizer dataset

Kazuya NISHINA, Akihiko ITO, Seiji HAYASHI

1 National Institute for Environmental Studies 16-2, Onogawa, Tsukuba, 305-8506, JAPAN, https://www.nies.go.jp/chiiki/en/index_en.html, nishina.kazuya@nies.go.jp

Abstract

We developed a new historical global N fertilizer map (half degree resolution) during 1961-2010 based on FAOSTAT and various global dataset. This new map incorporated the fraction of NH4+ (and NO3) into N fertilizer inputs by utilizing fertilizer species information in FAOSTAT. In the data processing, we applied a statistical data imputation method for the missing data in FAOSTAT. The multiple imputation method enabled to fill gaps of the time-series data by the plausible values. In this study, we evaluated NH3, NO, and N2O emissions from agricultural soils with biogeochemical model “VISIT” using the developed map. During 1961-2010, synthetic fertilizer consumption increased from 15 Tg-N to 110 Tg-N at global. In this period, the global average fraction of NH4+ was about 80% to synthetic N fertilizer consumption. The most countries showed NH4+ based fertilizer are dominant, however, the ratio NH4+:NO3 in N fertilizer inputs shows clear differences among countries and periods. Considering the ratio NH4+:NO3 in N fertilizer inputs, the simulated NH3 volatilization were generally reduced, compared to N fertilizer input dealt as only NH4+input assumption. On the other hand, NO and N2O emissions shows both positive and negative impacts using the NH4+:NO3 fertilizer map. Our new map can be utilized and bring new insights in the global model studies for the assessment of historical terrestrial N cycling changes.

The unexpectedly large nitrogen footprint of Australians

Xia Liang1, Allison M. Leach2, James N. Galloway3, Baojing Gu4,5, Shu Kee Lam1, Deli Chen1

1 Crop and Soil Science Section, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia. E-mail: xial1@student.unimelb.edu.au

2 Department of Natural Resources & Earth Systems Science and The Sustainability Institute, University of New Hampshire, 107 Nesmith Hall, 131 Main Street, Durham, NH, 03824, USA.

3 Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Clark Hall, 291 McCormick Road, P.O. Box 400123, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4123, USA

4 Department of Land Management, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, PR China

5 Policy Simulation Laboratory, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, PR China

Abstract

Anthropogenic release of reactive nitrogen (Nr; all species of N except N2) to the global nitrogen (N) cycle is substantial and it negatively affects human and ecosystem health. A novel metric, the N footprint, provides a consumer-based perspective for N use efficiency and connects lifestyle choices with N losses. Here we report the first full-scale assessment of the anthropogenic Nr loss by Australians. Despite its ‘clean and green’ image, Australia has the largest N footprint (47 kg N cap-1 yr-1) both in food and energy sectors among all countries that have used the N-Calculator model. About 69% of the Australia’s N footprint is attributed to food production and consumption, with the rest from energy consumption. Beef consumption and production is the major contributor of the high food N footprint, while the heavy dependence on coal for electricity explains the large energy N footprint. Our study demonstrates opportunities for managing N loss and lifestyle choices to reduce the N footprint.

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