Terrestrial N2O emissions and related functional genes under climate change: A global meta‐analysis
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Zheng, Zhenzhen
Wang, Weijin
Biederman, Joel A
Xu, Xingliang
Ran, Qinwei
Qian, Ruyan
Xu, Cong
Zhang, Biao
Wang, Fang
Zhou, Shutong
Cui, Lizhen
Che, Rongxiao
Hao, Yanbin
Cui, Xiaoyong
Xu, Zhihong
Wang, Yanfen
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Abstract
Nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from soil contribute to global warming and are in turn substantially affected by climate change. However, climate change impacts on N2O production across terrestrial ecosystems remain poorly understood. Here, we synthesised 46 published studies of N2O fluxes and relevant soil functional genes (SFGs, i.e. archaeal amoA, bacterial amoA, nosZ, narG, nirK and nirS) to assess their responses to increased temperature, increased or decreased precipitation amounts, and prolonged drought (no change in total precipitation but increase in precipitation intervals) in terrestrial ecosystem (i.e. grasslands, forests, shrublands, tundra and croplands). Across the dataset, temperature increased N2O emissions by 33%. However, the effects were highly variable across biomes, with strongest temperature responses in shrublands, variable responses in forests and negative responses in tundra. The warming methods employed also influenced the effects of temperature on N2O emissions (most effectively induced by open‐top chambers). Whole‐day or whole‐year warming treatment significantly enhanced N2O emissions, but day‐time, night‐time or short‐season warming did not have significant effects. Regardless of biome, treatment method and season, increased precipitation promoted N2O emission by an average of 55%, while decreased precipitation suppressed N2O emission by 31%, predominantly driven by changes in soil moisture. The effect size of precipitation changes on nirS and nosZ showed a U‐shape relationship with soil moisture; further insight into biotic mechanisms underlying N2O emission response to climate change remain limited by data availability, underlying a need for studies that report SFG. Our findings indicate that climate change substantially affects N2O emission and highlight the urgent need to incorporate this strong feedback into most climate models for convincing projection of future climate change.
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Global Change Biology
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© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Terrestrial N2O emissions and related functional genes under climate change: A global meta‐analysis, Global Change BiologyR, which has been published in final form at 10.1111/gcb.14847. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving (http://olabout.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-828039.html)
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Environmental sciences
Biological sciences
drought
nitrous oxide
precipitation
soil N cycle
soil moisture
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Li, L; Zheng, Z; Wang, W; Biederman, JA; Xu, X; Ran, Q; Qian, R; Xu, C; Zhang, B; Wang, F; Zhou, S; Cui, L; Che, R; Hao, Y; Cui, X; Xu, Z; Wang, Y, Terrestrial N2 O emissions and related functional genes under climate change: A global meta-analysis., Global Change Biology, 2019