Effects of elevated ozone concentration on CH4 and N2O emission from paddy soil under fully open‐air field conditions
We investigated the effects of elevated ozone concentration (E‐O₃) on CH₄and N₂O emission from paddies with two rice cultivars: an inbred Indica cultivar Yangdao 6 (YD6) and a hybrid one II‐you 084 (IIY084), under fully open‐air field conditions in China. A mean 26.7% enhancement of ozone concentrat...
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Published in | Global Change Biology Vol. 21; no. 4; pp. 1727 - 1736 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Blackwell Science
01.04.2015
Blackwell Publishing Ltd Wiley |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | We investigated the effects of elevated ozone concentration (E‐O₃) on CH₄and N₂O emission from paddies with two rice cultivars: an inbred Indica cultivar Yangdao 6 (YD6) and a hybrid one II‐you 084 (IIY084), under fully open‐air field conditions in China. A mean 26.7% enhancement of ozone concentration above the ambient level (A‐O₃) significantly reduced CH₄emission at tillering and flowering stages leading to a reduction of seasonal integral CH₄emission by 29.6% on average across the two cultivars. The reduced CH₄emission is associated with O₃‐induced reduction in the whole‐plant biomass (−13.2%), root biomass (−34.7%), and maximum tiller number (−10.3%), all of which curbed the carbon supply for belowground CH₄production and its release from submerged soil to atmosphere. Although no significant difference was detected between the cultivars in the CH₄emission response to E‐O₃, a larger decrease in CH₄emission with IIY084 (−33.2%) than that with YD6 (−7.0%) was observed at tillering stage, which may be due to the larger reduction in tiller number in IIY084 by E‐O₃. Additionally, E‐O₃reduced seasonal mean NOₓflux by 5.7% and 11.8% with IIY084 and YD6, respectively, but the effects were not significant statistically. We found that the relative response of CH₄emission to E‐O₃was not significantly different from those reported in open‐top chamber experiments. This study has thus confirmed that increasing ozone concentration would mitigate the global warming potential of CH₄and suggested consideration of the feedback mechanism between ozone and its precursor emission into the projection of future ozone effects on terrestrial ecosystem. |
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Bibliography: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12810 Ministry of Environment, Japan Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences - No. ISSASIP1112; No. KZCX2-EW-414 istex:036F65F0B0B017F4CEDAD56922B95781F7C2E4A0 ArticleID:GCB12810 ark:/67375/WNG-09MZMLVW-4 National Natural Science Foundation of China - No. 41271256 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1354-1013 1365-2486 1365-2486 |
DOI: | 10.1111/gcb.12810 |