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  5. Sward composition and soil moisture conditions affect nitrous oxide emissions and soil nitrogen dynamics following urea-nitrogen application
 
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Sward composition and soil moisture conditions affect nitrous oxide emissions and soil nitrogen dynamics following urea-nitrogen application

Author(s)
Bracken, Conor  
Lanigan, Gary  
Richards, Karl  
Müller, Christoph  
Tracy, Saoirse  
Grant, Jim  
Krol, D. J.  
Sheridan, Helen  
Lynch, Bridget  
Grace, C.  
Fritch, Rochelle  
Murphy, Paul  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/12426
Date Issued
2020-06-20
Date Available
2021-08-19T16:08:07Z
Embargo end date
2022-03-06
Abstract
Increased emissions of N2O, a potent greenhouse gas (GHG), from agricultural soils is a major concern for the sustainability of grassland agriculture. Emissions of N2O are closely associated with the rates and forms of N fertilisers applied as well as prevailing weather and soil conditions. Evidence suggests that multispecies swards require less fertiliser N input, and may cycle N differently, thus reducing N loss to the environment. This study used a restricted simplex-centroid experimental design to investigate N2O emissions and soil N cycling following application of urea-N (40 kg N ha−1) to eight experimental swards (7.8 m2) with differing proportions of three plant functional groups (grass, legume, herb) represented by perennial ryegrass (PRG, Lolium perenne), white clover (WC, Trifolium repens) and ribwort plantain (PLAN, Plantago lanceolata), respectively. Swards were maintained under two contrasting soil moisture conditions to examine the balance between nitrification and denitrification. Two N2O peaks coincided with fertiliser application and heavy rainfall events; 13.4 and 17.7 g N2O-N ha−1 day−1 (ambient soil moisture) and 39.8 and 86.9 g N2O-N ha−1 day−1 (wet soil moisture). Overall, cumulative N2O emissions post-fertiliser application were higher under wet soil conditions. Increasing legume (WC) proportions from 0% to 60% in multispecies swards resulted in model predicted N2O emissions increasing from 22.3 to 96.2 g N2O-N ha−1 (ambient soil conditions) and from 59.0 to 219.3 g N2O-N ha−1 (wet soil conditions), after a uniform N application rate. Soil N dynamics support denitrification as the dominant source of N2O especially under wet soil conditions. Significant interactions of PRG or WC with PLAN on soil mineral N concentrations indicated that multispecies swards containing PLAN potentially inhibit nitrification and could be a useful mitigation strategy for N loss to the environment from grassland agriculture.
Sponsorship
Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Teagasc
University College Dublin
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Elsevier
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
Volume
722
Copyright (Published Version)
2020 Elsevier
Subjects

Nitrous oxide

Soil nitrogen cycling...

Multispecies swards

Perennial ryegrass (L...

White clover (Trifoli...

Ribwort plantain (Pla...

Plant-species diversi...

Nitrate leaching loss...

N2O emissions

Grassland soil

N fertilizer

Nitrificiation inhibi...

Sampling frequency

Cattle slurry

Organic N

Transformation

DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137780
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0048-9697
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

Bracken et al 2020_STOTEN_repository.pdf

Size

2.44 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

0cd581d5418064f4a8bde287ff76c166

Owning collection
Agriculture and Food Science Research Collection
Mapped collections
Biology & Environmental Science Research Collection•
Earth Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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