Nitrogen Fertilization and Liming Increased CO2 and N2O Emissions from Tropical Ferralsols, but Not from a Vertisol
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Date
2023-06
Authors
Ntinyari, Winnie
Rüdiger, Reichel
Gweyi-Onyango, Joseph P.
Giweta, Mekonnen
Wissel, Holger
Masso, Cargele
Bol, Roland
Brüggemann, Nicolas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
wiley
Abstract
The application of nitrogen (N) fertilizers and liming (CaCO3) to improve soil
quality and crop productivity are regarded as effective and important agricultural
practices. However, they may increase greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. There
is limited information on the GHG emissions of tropical soils, specifically when
liming is combined with N fertilization. We therefore conducted a full factorial
laboratory incubation experiment to investigate how N fertilizer (0kgNha−1,
12.5kgNha−1 and 50kgNha−1) and liming (target pH=6.5) affect GHG emissions and soil N availability. We focussed on three common acidic soils (two
ferralsols and one vertisol) from Lake Victoria (Kenya). After 8weeks, the most
significant increase in cumulative carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrous oxide (N2O)
fluxes compared with the unfertilized control was found for the two ferralsols in
the N+lime treatment, with five to six times higher CO2 fluxes than the control.
The δ13C signature of soil-emitted CO2 revealed that for the ferralsols, liming (i.e.
the addition of CaCO3) was the dominant source of CO2, followed by urea (N fertilization), whereas no significant effect of liming or of N fertilization on CO2 flux
was found for the vertisol. In addition, the N2O fluxes were most significantly increased by the high N+lime treatment in the two ferralsols, with four times and
13 times greater N2O flux than that of the control. No treatment effects on N2O
fluxes were observed for the vertisol. Liming in combination with N fertilization
significantly increased the final nitrate content by 14.5%–39% compared with N
fertilization alone in all treatment combinations and soils. We conclude that consideration should be given to the GHG budgets of agricultural ferralsols since liming is associated with high liming-induced CO2 and N2O emissions. Therefore,
nature-based and sustainable sources should be explored as an alternative to liming in order to manage the pH and the associated fertility of acidic tropical soils.
Description
Article
Keywords
acidic soils, calcium carbonate, carbon dioxide, fossil CO2 emissions, isotope signature, nitrous oxide
Citation
Ntinyari, W., Reichel, R., Gweyi‐Onyango, J. P., Giweta, M., Wissel, H., Masso, C., ... & Brüggemann, N. (2023). Nitrogen fertilization and liming increased CO2 and N2O emissions from tropical ferralsols, but not from a vertisol. Soil Use and Management, 39(3), 1125-1139.