Nitrous oxide emissions from agricultural soils at low temperatures: a laboratory microcosm study |
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Authors: | Hannu T Koponen,Laura Flö jt,Pertti J Martikainen |
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Affiliation: | Department of Environmental Sciences, Research and Development Unit of Environmental Health, University of Kuopio, BioTeknia 2, P.O. Box 1627, FIN-70211 Kuopio, Finland |
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Abstract: | We studied in laboratory microcosms (intact soil cores) N2O and CO2 emissions from four different agricultural soil types (organic soil, clay, silt and loam) at low temperatures with or without freezing-thawing events. When the temperature of the frozen soil cores was increased stepwise from −8 °C the N2O emissions began to increase at −0.5 °C, and peaked at −0.1 °C in the organic, clay and silt soils, and at +1.6 °C in the loam soils. However, a stepwise decrease in soil temperature from +15 °C also induced an increase in the N2O emissions close to the 0 °C. These emissions peaked between −0.4 and +2.5 °C depending on the soil type and water content. However, the emission maxima were from 2 to 14.3% of those encountered in the experiments where frozen soils were thawed. Our results show that in addition to the well-documented thawing peak, soils also can have a maximum in their N2O emission near 0 °C when soil temperature decrease. These emissions, however, are less than those emitted from thawing soils. The correlations between the N2O and CO2 emissions were weak. Our results suggest that N2O is produced in soils down to a temperature of −6 °C. |
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Keywords: | Temperature N2O emissions CO2 Freezing-thawing Agricultural soils |
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