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Aridity and plant uptake interact to make dryland soils hotspots for nitric oxide (NO) emissions.

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TLDR
Aridity and vegetation interact to maintain a leaky N cycle during periods when plant N uptake is low, and hydrologically disconnected soils favor both microbial and abiotic NO-producing mechanisms.
Abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) is an important trace gas and regulator of atmospheric photochemistry. Theory suggests moist soils optimize NO emissions, whereas wet or dry soils constrain them. In drylands, however, NO emissions can be greatest in dry soils and when dry soils are rewet. To understand how aridity and vegetation interact to generate this pattern, we measured NO fluxes in a California grassland, where we manipulated vegetation cover and the length of the dry season and measured [δ(15)-N]NO and [δ(18)-O]NO following rewetting with (15)N-labeled substrates. Plant N uptake reduced NO emissions by limiting N availability. In the absence of plants, soil N pools increased and NO emissions more than doubled. In dry soils, NO-producing substrates concentrated in hydrologically disconnected microsites. Upon rewetting, these concentrated N pools underwent rapid abiotic reaction, producing large NO pulses. Biological processes did not substantially contribute to the initial NO pulse but governed NO emissions within 24 h postwetting. Plants acted as an N sink, limiting NO emissions under optimal soil moisture. When soils were dry, however, the shutdown in plant N uptake, along with the activation of chemical mechanisms and the resuscitation of soil microbial processes upon rewetting, governed N loss. Aridity and vegetation interact to maintain a leaky N cycle during periods when plant N uptake is low, and hydrologically disconnected soils favor both microbial and abiotic NO-producing mechanisms. Under increasing rates of atmospheric N deposition and intensifying droughts, NO gas evasion may become an increasingly important pathway for ecosystem N loss in drylands.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analysis of fertilizer-induced soil NO and combined NO+N2O emissions

TL;DR: Detailed data derived from 114 peer-reviewed publications with 520 field measurements were synthesized using meta-analysis procedure to examine the N fertilizer-induced soil NO and the combined NO+N2 O emissions across global soils to mitigate soil NO emissions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agriculture is a major source of NO x pollution in California.

TL;DR: It is shown that agricultural soils are a dominant source of NOx pollution in California, with especially high soil NOx emissions from the state’s Central Valley region, and opportunities to limit NOx emission from agriculture by investing in management practices that will bring co-benefits to the economy, ecosystems, and human health in rural areas of California.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isotopic advances in understanding reactive nitrogen deposition and atmospheric processing.

TL;DR: This isotopic information provides new insight into the mechanisms of transformation and cycling of reactive N in the atmosphere and moreover helps resolve the contribution of multiple NOx and NH3 emission sources to deposition across landscapes, regions, and continents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrous oxide emissions and biogeochemical responses to soil freezing-thawing and drying-wetting

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the similarities and differences in the mechanisms which lead to potentially higher N2O fluxes during FT compared to DW cycles and identify strategic research areas required for improving the understanding of FT and DW processes leading to emissions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Drought Manipulation on Soil Nitrogen Cycling: A Meta‐Analysis

TL;DR: Homyak et al. as discussed by the authors used a meta-analytical approach on the results of field experiments that reduced precipitation and measured N supply (i.e., indices of N mineralization), soil microbial biomass, inorganic N pools (ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3−)), and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Factors of Soil Formation

Hans Jenny
- 01 Nov 1941 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Desertification: Building a Science for Dryland Development

TL;DR: The DDP, supported by a growing and well-documented set of tools for policy and management action, helps navigate the inherent complexity of desertification and dryland development, identifying and synthesizing those factors important to research, management, and policy communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen mineralization: challenges of a changing paradigm

TL;DR: A complete new conceptual model of the soil N cycle needs to incorporate recent research on plant–microbe competition and microsite processes to explain the dynamics of N across the wide range of N availability found in terrestrial ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Terrestrial phosphorus limitation: mechanisms, implications, and nitrogen–phosphorus interactions

TL;DR: It is suggested that depletion, soil barriers, and low-P parent material often cause ultimate limitation because they control the ecosystem mass balance of P and cause it to be an ultimate limiting nutrient.
Book

Factors of Soil Formation: A System of Quantitative Pedology

Hans Jenny
TL;DR: Factors of soil formation : a system of quantitative pedology / Hans Jenny ; foreword by Ronald Amundson as discussed by the authors, published by McGraw-Hill, 1941, with new foreword.
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