Gebauer, G*;
Goldberg, S:
The fate of N2O in a Norway spruce forest soil investigated by concentration and isotope profiles
Talk,
BIOGEOMON, Helsinki: 2009-06-29 - 2009-07-03
Abstract:The fate of N2O in a Norway spruce forest soil investigated by concentration and isotope profiles
Gerhard Gebauer, Stefanie D. Goldberg
Laboratory of Isotope Biogeochemistry, BayCEER, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany, gerhard.gebauer@uni-bayreuth.de, stefanie.goldberg@uni-bayreuth.de
Nitrous oxide (N
2O) is a potential and long-lasting greenhouse gas of the atmosphere. The atmospheric N
2O concentration currently increases by about 0.3 % per year and reached 319 ppbv in 2005. With a contribution of about 70 % soils act as the main source for atmospheric N
2O. Soil N
2O emissions originate from microbial nitrification and denitrification, with the latter process also potentially being able to consume N
2O. Both processes are mainly driven by soil temperature, soil moisture and substrate availability. Changes in meteorological conditions as predicted for the future are, therefore, expected to affect N
2O emissions from soils.
In this study we investigated effects of experimentally induced drying/rewetting and freeze/thaw events on soil N
2O emissions in a mature Norway spruce forest in the Fichtelgebirge (NE Bavaria, Germany). Drought was induced by roof constructions and freezing by snow removal. The experiments were run in three replicates each. Non-manipulated plots served as controls. In addition to N
2O flux measurements between soil and atmosphere we analysed N
2O concentrations and stable isotope signatures (δ
15N
N2O and δ
18O
N2O) in soil air collected along soil profiles. The latter approach provides information on localisation of N
2O sources and sinks as well as identification of N
2O production and consumption processes.
Drought reduced the N
2O emission from the soil or even turned the forest soil temporarily to an N
2O sink. N
2O emission peaks after rewetting could not compensate for the drought effect. Soil frost caused a burst of N
2O emission.
Soil air N
2O concentration and stable isotope profiles provide a new and hitherto scarcely considered mechanistic explanation for all of these observations. N
2O concentration in the soil air decreased in most cases exponentially from the subsoil to the soil surface. This observation identifies microbial activity in the subsoil as an additional source for N
2O and diffusion to the soil surface along a concentration gradient. A shift in the N
2O isotope signature along the concentration gradient towards increasingly positive δ values indicates, furthermore, a simultaneous microbial N
2O consumption (reduction to N
2). Drought reduced the source strength of the soil for N
2O while simultaneously the sink function of the topsoil for N
2O remained active. Both of these factors resulted in a temporary occurrence of below-atmospheric N
2O concentrations in the air of the topsoil and thus a soil sink function for atmospheric N
2O under severe drought. Frost in the topsoil was the only exception for these trends in N
2O concentration and isotope signature. Under conditions of soil frost the topsoil served no longer as a sink for N
2O, thus leading to the observed burst in N
2O emission.
The until now almost unconsidered sink function of soils for N
2O sheds a new light on the hitherto poorly resolved global N
2O budget. We suggest the consideration of a soil N
2O sink function for future model calculations on global N
2O budgets.
References:
Goldberg, S.D. & Gebauer, G. 2008. Drought turns a Central European Norway spruce forest soil from an N
2O source to a transient N
2O sink. Global Change Biol. In press. Doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01752.x.
Goldberg, S.D., Knorr, K.-H. & Gebauer G. 2008. N
2O concentration and isotope signature along profiles provide deeper insight into the fate of N
2O in soils. Isotopes Environ. Health Stud. In press. Doi: 10.1080/10256010802507433.