Objective Exploring the effects of long-term nitrogen deposition on the concentration of available nitrogen and soil N2O emissions in forest soil is important for controlling soil greenhouse gas emissions and improving the accuracy of regional carbon source sink assessment.
Method The effect of N addition at different levels (control, 50 kg/(ha·year), 150 kg/(ha·year)) and forms (nitrate N: NaNO3; ammonium N: (NH4)2SO4 and mixed N: NH4NO3) on N2O emission from temperate plantation soils was analyzed by a field N addition control experiment using static chamber/gas chromatography.
Result (1) The forms and levels of N addition caused significant accumulation of soil NH4+-N and NO3−-N. The accumulation effect of NO3−-N was much higher than that of NH4+-N. (2) Soil N2O emissions were promoted by different forms and levels of N additions. Low and high levels of NaNO3, (NH4)2SO4, and NH4NO3 additions increased annual cumulative soil N2O emissions by 87.39% and 146.79%, 86.13% and 74.91%, 98.67% and 50.50%, respectively. (3) Combined with the results of our previous study, we speculated that nitrification reaction was the dominant process of N2O emission from temperate plantation soils, and NH4+-N was more efficiently converted to N2O than NO3−-N.
Conclusion The effect of long-term nitrogen addition on soil N2O emissions is stage-specific. Therefore, we emphasize the importance of long-term field monitoring, and the contribution effect of N addition on soil N2O emissions from temperate forests may be overestimated if the experimental period is short.