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Effect of Nitrification Inhibitor Addition on Rice N Utilization and Soil Bacterial Community

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Evangelos Petropoulos

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Abstract

© 2022, The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Sociedad Chilena de la Ciencia del Suelo.Clarifying the contribution of soil and fertilizer nitrogen (N) to rice N uptake is crucial to understand the synergistic mechanism of nitrification inhibitors (NI) and formulate the application strategy. Herein, four typical hydromorphic paddy soils, two origins with two soil fertilites for each origin, were selected for the pot experiment, with two treatments: (a) conventional split fertilization with 15 N-labeled urea and (b) combined with NI (2-chloro-6-(trichloromethyl)-pyridine (CP)). We found that CP addition significantly increased 16.92% rice yield and 19.86% N uptake than the control, which was not affected by soil type. The variables of inorganic N in paddy water, soil inorganic N, and soil microbial functional genes (AOA, AOB, nirK, nirS, and nosZ) explained together ~ 75% of the total variation between samples. Meaningfully, soil NOX−-N content at the heading stage and NOX−-N concentration in paddy water at tillering fertilization stage were the two most important contributors; the earlier contributed more (23.2%, P < 0.05) than the latter (18.4%, P < 0.05). As a result, the increased N uptake of CP treatment from urea (12.83%) was lower than that from soil (23.92%). Also, the soil bacterial community showed a definite response to CP addition. Proteobacteria, acidobacteria, and chloroflexi were the dominant bacteria in paddies for the tested soils at the phylum level, but their response to CP addition varied with soil type. The results confirm the increasing effect of NI on N utilization, and soils contribute more than urea. The response of soil bacterial community to CP addition also deserves attention.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Hou P, Zhao S, He S, Zhou Y, Petropoulos E, Willett I, Xue L, Yang L, Chen D

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition

Year: 2023

Volume: 23

Pages: 1019-1029

Online publication date: 27/12/2022

Acceptance date: 12/12/2022

ISSN (print): 0718-9508

ISSN (electronic): 0718-9516

Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH

URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s42729-022-01100-7

DOI: 10.1007/s42729-022-01100-7


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