Short-term effects of nitrogen deposition on nitrogen spatial and temporal distributions in a Calamagrostis angustifolia wetland of the Sanjiang Plain

Fu, X; Ni, H; Liu, Y; Wang, J; Wang, J; Ma, F

HERO ID

6725534

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2020

Language

English

PMID

32437364

HERO ID 6725534
In Press No
Year 2020
Title Short-term effects of nitrogen deposition on nitrogen spatial and temporal distributions in a Calamagrostis angustifolia wetland of the Sanjiang Plain
Authors Fu, X; Ni, H; Liu, Y; Wang, J; Wang, J; Ma, F
Journal PLoS ONE
Volume 15
Issue 5
Page Numbers e0232767
Abstract Nitrogen (N) availability is an important factor regulating the feedback mechanisms of global change. This research uses a small Calamagrostis angustifolia wetland i = on the Sanjiang Plain of Northeast China as the research object and 15N tracer technology to study the effects of different nitrogen deposition levels (0 gN/m2, 4 gN/m2, and 8 gN/m2) through in situ controlled field experiments. Temporal and spatial distribution patterns of nitrogen in plants and soils and their short-term effects on nitrous oxide emissions fluxes were studied. The results showed that 1) the nitrogen content in the stems, leaves and roots of C. angustifolia decreased slowly with the growing season. Nitrogen application significantly increased the absorption of tracer nitrogen in the aboveground and underground plant parts (P<0.01), and the more nitrogen applied, the larger the absorption amount was (P<0.01). The absorbed amount accounted for 52%-86% of the total tracer nitrogen. 2) The tracer nitrogen in the soil did not show a significant change; the more nitrogen that was applied, the more nitrogen that was retained in the soil, and the tracer nitrogen adsorbed by the soil was mainly ammonium nitrogen. 3) The variation in the 15N-labeled nitric oxide emissions flux under different nitrogen treatments was consistent; nitrogen application increased the 15N-labeled nitric oxide emissions flux, but the difference between the low-nitrogen and high-nitrogen treatments was not significant (P>0.05).
Doi 10.1371/journal.pone.0232767
Pmid 32437364
Wosid WOS:000537517800025
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English