• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Soil-Atmosphere Exchange of N₂O and NO in Near-Natural Savanna and Agricultural Land in Burkina Faso (W. Africa)
  • Contributor: Brümmer, Christian; Brüggemann, Nicolas; Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus; Falk, Ulrike; Szarzynski, Jörg; Vielhauer, Konrad; Wassmann, Reiner; Papen, Hans
  • imprint: Springer Science+Business Media, 2008
  • Published in: Ecosystems
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 1432-9840; 1435-0629
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>In a combined field and laboratory study in the southwest of Burkina Faso, we quantified soilatmosphere N₂O and N₂O exchange. N₂O emissions were measured during two field campaigns throughout the growing seasons 2005 and 2006 at five different experimental sites, that is, a natural savanna site and four agricultural sites planted with sorghum (n = 2), cotton and peanut. The agricultural fields were not irrigated and not fertilized. Although N₂O exchange mostly fluctuated between -2 and 8 μg N₂O-N m⁻¹ h⁻¹, peak N₂O emissions of 10-35 μg N₂O-N m⁻² h⁻¹ during the second half of June 2005, and up to 150 ¼g N₂O N m⁻² h⁻¹ at the onset of the rainy season 2006, were observed at the native savanna site, whereas the effect of the first rain event on N ²O emissions at the crop sites was low or even not detectable. Additionally, a fertilizer experiment was conducted at a sorghum field that was divided into three plots receiving different amounts of N fertilizer (plot A: 140 kg N ha⁻¹; plot B: 52.5 kg N ha⁻¹; plot C: control). During the first 3 weeks after fertilization, only a minor increase in N₂O emissions at the two fertilized plots was detected. After 24 days, however, N₂O emission rates increased exponentially at plot A up to a mean of 80 ¼g N₂O-N m⁻² h⁻², whereas daily mean values at plot B reached only 19 ¼g N₂O-N m⁻² h⁻², whereas N₂O flux rates at plot C remained unchanged. The calculated annual N₂O emission of the nature reserve site amounted to 0.52 kg N₂O-N ha⁻¹ a⁻¹ in 2005 and to 0.67 kg N₂O-N ha⁻¹ a⁻¹ in 2006, whereas the calculated average annual N₂O release of the crop sites was only 0.19 kg N₂O-N ha⁻ a⁻¹ and 0.20 kg N₂O-N ha⁻¹ a⁻¹ in 2005 and 2006, respectively. In a laboratory study, potential N₂O and NO formation under different soil moisture regimes were determined. Single wetting of dry soil to medium soil water content with subsequent drying caused the highest increase in N₂O and NO emissions with maximum fluxes occurring 1 day after wetting. The stimulating effect lasted for 3-4 days. A weaker stimulation of N₂O and NO fluxes was detected during daily wetting of soil to medium water content, whereas no significant stimulating effect of single or daily wetting to high soil water content (&gt;67%<tex-math>${\rm{WHC}}_{{\rm{max}}} $</tex-math>) was observed. This study demonstrates that the impact of land-use change in West African savanna on N trace gas emissions is smaller—with the caveat that there could have been potentially higher N₂O and NO emissions during the initial conversion—than the effect of timing and distribution of rainfall and of the likely increase in nitrogen fertilization in the future.</p>