Understanding the Relations between Soil Biochemical Properties and N 2 O Emissions in a Long-Term Integrated Crop-Livestock System.
Arminda Moreira de CarvalhoMaria Lucrecia Gerosa RamosDivina Cléia Resende Dos SantosAlexsandra Duarte de OliveiraIeda de Carvalho MendesStefany Braz SilvaThais Rodrigues de SousaRaíssa de Araujo DantasAntonio Marcos Miranda SilvaRobélio Leandro MarchãoPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Edaphoclimatic conditions influence nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emissions from agricultural systems where soil biochemical properties play a key role. This study addressed cumulative N 2 O emissions and their relations with soil biochemical properties in a long-term experiment (26 years) with integrated crop-livestock farming systems fertilized with two P and K rates. The farming systems consisted of continuous crops fertilized with half of the recommended P and K rates (CCF1), continuous crops at the recommended P and K rates (CCF2), an integrated crop-livestock system with half of the recommended P and K rates (ICLF1), and an integrated crop-livestock at the recommended P and K rates (ICLF2). The ICLF2 may have promoted the greatest entry of carbon into the soil and positively influenced the soil's biochemical properties. Total carbon (TC) was highest in ICLF2 in both growing seasons. The particulate and mineral-associated fractions in 2016 and 2017, respectively, and the microbial biomass fraction in the two growing seasons were also very high. Acid phosphatase and arylsulfatase in ICLF1 and ICLF2 were highest in 2016. The soil properties correlated with cumulative N 2 O emissions were TC, total nitrogen (TN), particulate nitrogen (PN), available nitrogen (AN), mineral-associated organic carbon (MAC), and microbial biomass carbon (MBC). The results indicated that ICLF2 induces an accumulation of more stable organic matter (OM) fractions that are unavailable to the microbiota in the short term and result in lower N 2 O emissions.