Compaction stimulates denitrification in an urban park soil using 15N tracing technique

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Shun Li
  • Huan Deng
  • Christopher Günther T Rensing
  • Yong Guan Zhu

Soils in urban areas are subjected to compaction with accelerating urbanization. The effects of anthropogenic compaction on urban soil denitrification are largely unknown. We conducted a study on an urban park soil to investigate how compaction impacts denitrification. By using 15N labeling method and acetylene inhibition technique, we performed three coherent incubation experiments to quantify denitrification in compacted soil under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Uncompacted soil was set as the control treatment. When monitoring soil incubation without extra substrate, higher nitrous oxide (N2O) flux and denitrification enzyme activity were observed in the compacted soil than in the uncompacted soil. In aerobic incubation with the addition of K15NO3, N2O production in the compacted soil reached 10.11 ng N h-1 g-1 as compared to 0.02 ng N h-1 g-1 in the uncompacted soil. Denitrification contributed 96 % of the emitted N2O in the compacted soil and 36 % of the emitted N2O in the uncompacted soil; total denitrification rate was higher in the compacted soil (up to 79.35 ng N h-1 g-1) than in the uncompacted soil (0.11 ng N h-1 g-1). Under anaerobic incubation with the addition of K15NO3, no statistical difference in total N losses and 15N-(N2O+N2) flux between the uncompacted soil and the compacted soil was detected. Compaction promoted soil denitrification and may impact urban N biogeochemical cycling.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironmental Science and Pollution Research
Volume21
Issue number5
Pages (from-to)3783-3791
Number of pages9
ISSN0944-1344
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

    Research areas

  • Compaction, Denitrification, Nitrous oxide, Urban soil

ID: 130479197