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Foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emissions constitute a significant source to atmosphere

journal contribution
posted on 2024-02-19, 01:34 authored by Shuping Qin, Yaxing Pang, Huixian Hu, Ting Liu, Dan Yuan, Tim Clough, Nicole Wrage-Mönnig, Jiafa LuoJiafa Luo, Shungui Zhou, Lin Ma, Chunsheng Hu, Oene Oenema
<p dir="ltr">Nitrous oxide (N<sub>2</sub>O) is a potent greenhouse gas and causes stratospheric ozone depletion. While the emissions of N<sub>2</sub>O from soil are widely recognized, recent research has shown that terrestrial plants may also emit N<sub>2</sub>O from their leaves under controlled laboratory conditions. However, it is unclear whether foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emissions are universal across varying plant taxa, what the global significance of foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emissions is, and how the foliage produces N<sub>2</sub>O in situ. Here we investigated the abilities of 25 common plant taxa, including trees, shrubs and herbs, to emit N<sub>2</sub>O under in situ conditions. Using <sup>15</sup>N isotopic labeling, we demonstrated that the foliage-emitted N<sub>2</sub>O was predominantly derived from nitrate. Moreover, by selectively injecting biocide in conjunction with the isolating and back-inoculating of endophytes, we demonstrated that the foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emissions were driven by endophytic bacteria. The seasonal N<sub>2</sub>O emission rates ranged from 3.2 to 9.2 ng N<sub>2</sub>O–N g<sup>−1</sup> dried foliage h<sup>−1</sup>. Extrapolating these emission rates to global foliar biomass and plant N uptake, we estimated global foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emission to be 1.21 and 1.01 Tg N<sub>2</sub>O–N year<sup>−1</sup>, respectively. These estimates account for 6%–7% of the current global annual N<sub>2</sub>O emission of 17 Tg N<sub>2</sub>O–N year<sup>−1</sup>, indicating that in situ foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emission is a universal process for terrestrial plants and contributes significantly to the global N<sub>2</sub>O inventory. This finding highlights the importance of measuring foliar N<sub>2</sub>O emissions in future studies to enable the accurate assigning of mechanisms and the development of effective mitigation.</p>

History

Rights statement

© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Publication date

2024-02-16

Project number

  • Non revenue

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Journal title

Global Change Biology

ISSN

1354-1013

Volume/issue number

30(2)

Page numbers

e17181

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