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  • Title: N(2)O concentration and isotope signature along profiles provide deeper insight into the fate of N(2)O in soils.
    Author: Goldberg SD, Knorr KH, Gebauer G.
    Journal: Isotopes Environ Health Stud; 2008 Dec; 44(4):377-91. PubMed ID: 19061068.
    Abstract:
    Nitrous oxide is an important greenhouse gas and its origin and fate are thus of broad interest. Most studies on emissions of nitrous oxide from soils focused on fluxes between soil and atmosphere and hence represent an integration of physical and biological processes at different depths of a soil profile. Analysis of N(2)O concentration and isotope signature along soil profiles was suggested to improve the localisation of sources and sinks in soils as well as underlying processes and could therefore extend our knowledge on processes affecting surface N(2)O fluxes. Such a mechanistic understanding would be desirable to improve N(2)O mitigation strategies and global N(2)O budgets. To investigate N(2)O dynamics within soil profiles of two contrasting (semi)natural ecosystem types (a temperate acidic fen and a Norway spruce forest), soil gas samplers were constructed to meet the different requirements of a water-saturated and an unsaturated soil, respectively. The samplers were installed in three replicates and allowed soil gas sampling from six different soil depths. We analysed soil air for N(2)O concentration and isotope composition and calculated N(2)O net turnover using a mass balance approach and considering diffusive fluxes. At the fen site, N(2)O was mainly produced in 30-50 cm soil depth. Diffusion to adjacent layers above and below indicated N(2)O consumption. Values of delta(15)N and delta(18)O of N(2)O in the fen soil were always linearly correlated and their qualitative changes within the profile corresponded with the calculated turnover processes, suggesting further reduction of N(2)O. In the spruce forest, highest N(2)O production occurred in the topsoil, but there was also notable production occurring in the subsoil at a depth of 70 cm. Changes in N(2)O isotope composition as to be expected from local production and consumption processes within the soil profile did hardly occur, though. This was presumably caused by high diffusive fluxes and comparatively low net turnover, as isotope signatures approached values measured for ambient N(2)O towards the topsoil. Our results demonstrate a highly variable influence of diffusive versus production/consumption processes on N(2)O concentration and isotope composition, depending on the type of ecosystem. This finding indicates the necessity of further N(2)O concentration and isotope profile investigations in different types of natural and anthropogenic ecosystems in order to generalise our mechanistic understanding of N(2)O exchange between soil and atmosphere.
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