Release of nitrous oxide and dinitrogen from a transition bog under drained and rewetted conditions due to denitrification: results from a [15N]nitrate-bromide double-tracer study.

2015 
Denitrification is well known being the most important nitrate-consuming process in water-logged peat soils, whereby the intermediate compound nitrous oxide (N2O) and the end product dinitrogen (N2) are ultimately released. The present study was aimed at evaluating the release of these gases (due to denitrification) from a nutrient-poor transition bog ecosystem under drained and three differently rewetted conditions at the field scale using a 15N-tracer approach ([15N]nitrate application, 30 kg N ha−1) and a common closed-chamber technique. The drained site is characterized by a constant water table (WT) of –30 cm (here referred to as D30), while rewetted sites represent a constant WT of –15 cm, a constant WT of 0 cm (i.e. waterlogged), and an initial WT of 0 cm (which decreased slightly during the experiment), respectively, (here referred to as R15, R0, and R0d, respectively). The highest N2O emissions were observed at D30 (291 µg N2O–N m−2 h−1) as well as at R0d (665 µg N2O–N m−2 h−1). At the rewetted p...
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