Open Access Article
This Open Access Article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 3.0 Unported Licence

Fate of urea-15N as influenced by different irrigation modes

Xu Rua, Chen Jingnanbc, Lin Zhiyuana, Chen Xieyonga, Hou Maomaoa, Shen Shanshand, Jin Qiu*d and Zhong Fenglin*a
aHorticultural College of Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, Fujian Province 350000, China. E-mail: faczhong@163.com
bEngineering Research Center of Fujian University of Modern Facilities Agriculture, Fuqing, Fujian Province 350000, China
cCollege of Horticulture and Forest, Fujian Vocational College of Agriculture, Fuzhou, Fujian Province 350000, China
dInstitute of Water Conservancy Science of Nanjing, Nanjing, Jiangsu Province 210000, China. E-mail: fengyuwuzujq@126.com

Received 1st January 2020 , Accepted 11th March 2020

First published on 18th March 2020


Abstract

Fertilizer nitrogen (N) is a main pollutant in the agricultural ecosystem, while the fate of fertilizer N influenced by different irrigation modes is not well comparatively investigated. In this study, the distribution of fertilizer N in soil layers and tomato organs as well as its loss under drip, spray and flood irrigation with different quotas of 140, 180 and 220 m3 ha−1 were evaluated quantitatively by using nitrogen-15 (15N) labeled urea (abundance of 19.6%) as fertilizer source. The results showed that the plant 15N, soil 15N and 15N loss accounted for 27.9–47.8%, 38.8–54.0% and 10.3–21.9% of the total applied 15N, respectively. The amount of 15N absorbed by plants was significantly (p < 0.05) higher under drip and spray irrigation in comparison to flood irrigation with the same irrigation quota. The maximum 15N use efficiency and the minimum 15N residual were detected under drip irrigation with quota of 180 m3 ha−1, indicating that the supply and demand of urea-15N was more synchronized under such an irrigation mode. The 15N loss increased obviously as irrigation quota increased. Moreover, the correlation analysis between 15N loss and the possible impact factors indicated that the soil mineral 15N content after irrigation was one important factor influencing the 15N loss. Among the three irrigation modes, spray irrigation caused the lowest 15N loss of 10.3–13.1% when using the same irrigation quota. It was concluded that the irrigation modes have profound impacts on the fate of urea-15N. Irrigation could be used as a regulation pathway of plant N absorption and agricultural N output.


Introduction

Water-saving irrigation has achieved great success in Israel, The Netherlands, the United States, Japan, etc.1–5 In China, for a long time, most greenhouses have adopted the traditional furrow irrigation with low water use efficiency of only 40%.1 After the start of the 1990s, China began to attach importance to the agricultural water-saving irrigation with increasing investment. Agricultural demonstration areas or points for water-saving irrigation were set up in various places, which promoted the popularization and application of drip irrigation and micro spray irrigation in China.2 The only difference between spray irrigation and drip irrigation is the emitter (sprayer or dripper). The dripper consumes the residual pressure of the capillary by its own structure, while the micro sprayer consumes energy by direct spraying.3 The wetted area of spray irrigation is greater than that of drip irrigation, this is beneficial for eliminating the water saturation zone and improving the ventilation conditions around the crop roots, but spray irrigation increases the water loss through evaporation from the soil surface.4 Compared to spray irrigation, drip irrigation results in higher crop water use efficiency, while excessive irrigation water under drip irrigation may cause water saturation in the root zone that leads to root anoxia.5,6 Therefore, it is of great importance to choose a suitable irrigation method according to the actual production situation.

Nitrogen (N) is the key nutrient element for plant growth. Water is the carrier of N transport in SPAC system.7 Many studies have shown that there is a coupling effect between water and N.13,14 The mechanism of water and N coupling in the research by Kim8 shows: (1) the response of plants to water and N occurs simultaneously; (2) N application can increase water use efficiency; (3) water improves the ability of crops to absorb soil N and fertilizer N. Under sufficient water supply, the crop N use efficiency is higher due to the increased crop growth and evapotranspiration and the enhanced movement of N towards to root system along with water. The mode of water supply affects the crop utilization of N through changing the soil water condition. Early study9 shows that the drip irrigation increases the N use efficiency by the tomato plants in the spring-summer season by 8.4% compared with the traditional furrow irrigation.

N is not only a fertilizer resource, but one of the pollutants.10 The environmental problems caused by N are particularly prominent, such as the migration of nitrous oxide to atmosphere that increasing the greenhouse effect and disturbing the ozone layer; the migration of N oxide to rivers and ground water that polluting the drinking water and causing the eutrophication of water bodies; the deposited ammonia and N oxide from atmosphere to land that affecting the function of forest ecosystem.18–21 According to survey, 82% of China's 532 rivers are polluted by different degrees of N. The result by Zhu indicated that 92% of the N entering into Yangtze River and 88% into Yellow River each year are sourced from agriculture, and 50% of these agricultural N is from chemical fertilizer.22 Irrigation water is the carrier of N for its movement and transformation. Early results show that drip irrigation and other water-saving irrigation modes can change the distribution of N in soil profile. Besides, the fate of N is also influenced by irrigation amount. A higher N loss was observed from furrow or drip irrigation with full irrigation.11

However, although many studies have investigated the movement and utilization of N under water regulation, there is still a lack of comparative researches on the fate of N under different irrigation modes. Moreover, few related studies have distinguished soil N from fertilizer N. To improve the fertilizer N use efficiency and reduce the fertilizer N loss are of great significance for the ecological environment protection in modern agriculture. In this study, tomato was employed as plant material, and 15N isotope tracer was used to conduct the experiment under a plastic shed. The experiment included different irrigation modes and quotas. The objective of this study was: (1) to understand the distribution of fertilizer 15N (urea-15N) in tomato organs and soil layers under different irrigation modes; (2) to determine the amount of 15N loss and to find out the possible influencing factors.

Material and method

Experimental site

The experiment was carried out from May to October in 2018 at the modern agricultural park of Rudong County, Nantong City, Jiangsu Province of China. Rudong belongs to the area with a subtropical marine monsoon climate, where is affected by obvious ocean regulation and monsoon circulation. Rudong is very close to the ocean, and it has a mild climate, abundant precipitation, sufficient light and distinct four seasons (Table 1). In Rudong, the rainfall from June to September accounts for 55–80% of the total annual rainfall, which is unevenly distributed within the year. The annual dominant wind direction is southeast. The experiment was carried out under plastic shed. The plastic shed was 30 m in length and 8 m in width. The soil in the experimental area was loam with particle size of 0.02–0.2 mm, salt content of 2.47 g kg−1, bulk density of 1.35 g cm−3, field capacity of 24.6%, available N content was 163.4 mg kg−1, available P content of 15.2 mg kg−1, and available K of 138.1 mg kg−1.
Table 1 The climate information in the experimental site
Experimental site Average temperature (°C) Average rainfall (mm) Wind speed (m s−1) Frost-free duration (days) Annual sunshine hours (h)
Rudong 15 1042 3.5 223 1786


Experimental design

The experiment covers an area of 120 m2. The tomato variety “Dahongbao” (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill) was employed as plant material. The tomato seedlings were transplanted when they had six leaves. The transplant date was May 16. The tomato seedlings were planted in soil ridges. Each soil ridge had the height of 5 cm, length of 3.2 m and width of 55 cm. A distance of 20 cm was left between two adjacent ridges. Two rows of tomatoes were planted in one ridge, with row-to-row spacing of 30 cm and plant-to-plant spacing of 40 cm (Fig. 1a). The 16 tomato plants in the two rows of one ridge were formed as one treatment (Fig. 1). Plastic impervious membrane was installed between adjacent treatments with a depth of 60 cm to prevent the lateral seepage of water and fertilizer nutrients. The urea (N of 46%), calcium superphosphate (P2O5 of 16%) and potassium sulfate (K2O of 50%) were used as fertilizer. The fertilization amount was 180 kg ha−1 N, 90 kg ha−1 P2O5 and 54 kg ha−1 K2O assigned according to the basic fertilizer: the first ear fruit: the second ear fruit = 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1. The 4 tomato plants (Fig. 1b) in the middle of each treatment were applied with 15N labeled urea (abundance of 19.6%, produced by Shanghai Zhenzhun Biotechnology Co., Ltd) instead of common urea, while applications of P and K were the same as those of other tomatoes. It should be noted that only fertilizer (urea) was labeled with 15N, therefore the observed plant 15N was sourced from the labeled fertilizer. The total plant N minus plant 15N was the plant N sourcing from soil. The weeding and pest control of different treatments were consistent and carried out in accordance with local habits.
image file: d0ra00002g-f1.tif
Fig. 1 Arrangement of tomato plants.

The experiment contained three irrigation quotas of 140, 180 and 220 m3 ha−1, and three irrigation modes of spray irrigation, drip irrigation and flood irrigation, in a total of 3 × 3 = 9 treatments. Each treatment repeated three times. The irrigation amounts were controlled using the water meters. Spray irrigation used the plastic rotary sprinkler with pressure of 0.25 MPa and flow rate of 20 L h−1 (produced by Shandong Yuchen Water Saving Equipment Co., Ltd). The drip irrigation employed the PVC inlaid cylindrical pipe with 30 cm distance between two adjacent drippers, an inner diameter of 8 mm, a flow rate of 2 L h−1 and a working pressure of 0.3 MPa (produced by Shandong Yuchen Water Saving Equipment Co., Ltd). The flood irrigation adopted the manually hand irrigation. In practice, the hand irrigation was conducted near the plant roots without formation of runoff. For the experimental site, as well as many other vegetable cultivated areas in China, one fixed pump was used to irrigate various crops simultaneously. The pump was easy to be damaged if it was used to irrigate only one crop in a small area, due to the huge difference of flow between the inlet and outlet of the pump. Therefore, as local habits, the interval duration between two irrigations was 6 days, 21 times of irrigation were conducted during the whole growth stage of tomato. The plastic shed was well ventilated. No additional light, CO2, etc. were provided.

Sampling and measurement

Tomato fruits were harvested in batches from the end of July, and finished harvest on October 2. Three 15N-labeled tomato plants were randomly selected for each repetition in each treatment. The roots, leaves and fruits of these plants were separated, laid into an oven at 105 °C to be killed, and then dried at 70 °C to constant weight for measurement. The biomass of the different organs were weighed and recorded.

On a typical date in vigorous growth stage of tomato (July 5, the second day after irrigation), a soil drill was used to collect the soil samples in 0–20 and 20–40 cm soil layers for measuring soil mineral 15N and organic 15N contents. At the end of the experiment, on October 2, soil samples were collected with 10 cm increment in depth using a soil drill to investigate the distribution of 15N in soil profile. The soil samples were divided into two parts, one part was directly used for measurement, and the other part was air dried naturally. After air dried, the soil samples were grinded and passed through a 0.15 mm sieve.

The mineral N in fresh soil samples was extracted using 2 M KCl and distilled using micro Kjeldahl apparatus, in the presence of MgO and Devarda alloy. The 15N atom percentage excess in soil or plant samples was measured by mass spectrometer (Finniga-Mat-251, Mass-Spectrometers, Finnigan, Germany). Inside the mass spectrometer, the soil samples were vaporized and ionized into ion beams and then passed through electromagnetic field, different mass ions were deflected differently by the field and focused in different positions, so as to obtain the mass spectra of 15N isotope.

The crop use efficiency of urea-15N (15NUE) was calculated as:

image file: d0ra00002g-t1.tif

image file: d0ra00002g-t2.tif
where, Ndff is the total 15N absorbed by tomato (kg ha−1), Cs is the total N in tomato (kg ha−1), Es is the 15N atom percentage excess in tomato (%), Ef is the 15N atom percentage excess in the 15N labeled urea (%), and Mf is the application amount of 15N (kg ha−1). Both Es and Ef were measured using the mass spectrometer.

The 15N recovery was the sum of plant 15N absorption and soil 15N residue in 0–80 cm soil layer. The 15N loss is the differential value between total applied 15N and recovered 15N.

Data analysis

The SPSS 17.0 software was used for the significance analysis according to Duncan's multiple range test.12

Results

The accumulation of 15N in tomato organs and 15N use efficiency

In general, under the same irrigation mode, the increased irrigation quota promoted the 15N accumulation in different organs of tomato plants except that the tomato under drip irrigation with 180 m3 ha−1 irrigation quota accumulated more 15N in leaves, stems and fruits, compared to other irrigation quotas (Table 2). Irrigation mode had a significant (p < 0.01) effect on 15N accumulation in the organs. The drip irrigation obviously increased the accumulation of 15N in all the organs compared with irrigation and spray irrigation. There was a significant (p < 0.05) coupling effect from irrigation mode and quota on 15N accumulation amount in stem or fruit. The fruit 15N contributed most greatly to the whole plant 15N, accounting for about half of the total 15N absorbed by tomato plant. The highest fruit 15N of 44.0 kg ha−1 was obtained under 180 m3 ha−1 drip irrigation which significantly (p < 0.05) higher than that under other treatments.
Table 2 The effects of experimental treatments on the distribution of 15N-urea in different organs of tomatoa
Irrigation mode Irrigation quota (m3 ha−1) Leaf (kg ha−1) Stem (kg ha−1) Root (kg ha−1) Fruit (kg ha−1)
a In the same column, means followed by the same letter (a, b, c, d, e) do not differ significantly at 0.05 level, according to Duncan's multiple range test. *, ** and ns indicate that the experimental treatment has a significant (at 0.05 level) effect, an extremely significant (at 0.01 level) effect and no significant effect, respectively on the indicator.
Spray 140 27.6 ± 1.02 c 6.12 ± 0.24 d 2.54 ± 0.08 a 32.4 ± 1.77 bc
180 28.3 ± 1.03 bc 6.59 ± 0.24 bcd 2.31 ± 0.08 b 34.1 ± 0.41 b
220 30.0 ± 0.57 abc 7.09 ± 0.22 ab 2.29 ± 0.13 b 34.1 ± 1.78 b
Drip 140 29.4 ± 1.10 abc 6.34 ± 0.18 cd 2.35 ± 0.11 ab 34.2 ± 2.65 b
180 32.3 ± 3.13 a 7.45 ± 0.27 a 2.21 ± 0.09 bc 44.0 ± 5.59 a
220 31.4 ± 1.11 ab 6.83 ± 0.31 bc 2.04 ± 0.12 cd 34.4 ± 0.44 b
Flood 140 20.3 ± 1.07 d 4.84 ± 0.28 e 1.82 ± 0.09 d 23.1 ± 0.98 d
180 21.6 ± 1.57 d 5.24 ± 0.25 e 1.82 ± 0.11 d 25.7 ± 0.36 d
220 23.4 ± 1.23 d 5.24 ± 0.18 e 1.86 ± 0.10 d 27.6 ± 2.5 cd
Irrigation mode ** ** ** **  
Irrigation quota * ** * *  
Mode × quota ns * ns *  


The 15N use efficiency was overall improved by the increased irrigation quota in addition to that under drip irrigation conditions (Fig. 2). Under the same irrigation quota, the 15N use efficiency by tomato under drip irrigation or spray irrigation was significantly (p < 0.05) higher than that under flood irrigation. The lowest 15N use efficiency was only 27.9% under 140 m3 ha−1 flood irrigation treatment. Under 140 or 220 m3 ha−1 irrigation quotas, there was no significant difference between drip irrigation and spay irrigation in tomato 15N use efficiency while the efficiency was significantly (p < 0.05) higher with drip irrigation under the quota of 180 m3 ha−1, reaching 47.8%.


image file: d0ra00002g-f2.tif
Fig. 2 The 15N use efficiency under different irrigation treatments (values are means ± standard deviation. Means followed by the same letter (a, b, c, d) do not differ significantly at 0.05 level, according to Duncan's multiple range test. The 15N was resourced from the 15N-labelled urea with an abundance of 19.6%).

Distribution of 15N in soil profile

The total 15N in soil decreased with the deepening of soil layer (Fig. 3). The total amounts of 15N in 0–10 and 10–20 cm soil layers were the highest under flood irrigation. However, below 20 cm layer, the amounts of soil 15N under drip irrigation and spray irrigation were higher than that under flood irrigation, indicating that spray and drip irrigation were conducive to the migration of 15N to the soil layer below 20 cm. The amount of detected soil 15N below 60 cm was very low. Under the same irrigation mode, the decreased irrigation quota reserved more 15N in the surface soil (0–10 cm and 10–20 cm). Under irrigation quota of 220 m3 ha−1, drip irrigation is more effective than spray irrigation in driving 15N to move below 20 cm soil layer, but this rule was not found under the quotas of 140 or 180 m3 ha−1.
image file: d0ra00002g-f3.tif
Fig. 3 The distribution of 15N-urea in soil profile under different irrigation quotas of 140 (a), 180 (b) and 220 (c) m3 ha−1 (values are means ± standard deviation).

Mineral 15N and organic 15N after typical irrigation

The mineral 15N content in 0–20 cm soil layer under drip irrigation was significantly (p < 0.05) higher than that under spray or flood irrigation, similar rule was more obvious in 20–40 cm soil layer. However, the comparative difference of soil organic 15N was opposite to that of mineral 15N. The soil organic 15N content in 0–20 cm soil layer was significantly (p < 0.05) greater under flood irrigation compared to other irrigation modes with all irrigation quotas, while in 20–40 cm soil layer, the organic 15N content was greater under flood irrigation only with 140 m3 ha−1 quota. The key in the coupling effect of water and N is to promote the transformation of 15N from fertilizer form to mineral form after water regulation. From this perspective, drip irrigation is more advantageous than the other two modes under the same irrigation quota.

The balance of 15N

The plant 15N, soil 15N and 15N loss accounted for 27.9–47.8%, 38.8–54.0% and 10.3–21.9% of the total applied 15N, respectively (Table 3). The soil 15N amount decreased with the increased irrigation quota except under drip irrigation. A higher 15N residue in soil increased the risk of 15N loss, and also indicated that the 15N supply and demand was not harmony. Under drip irrigation with quota of 180 m3 ha−1, the soil residual 15N was the lowest (69.8 kg ha−1), whereas the plant 15N was the greatest (86.0 kg ha−1). The 15N loss increased with the increased irrigation quota, the maximum 15N loss of 39.5 kg ha−1 was detected under flood irrigation with the quota of 220 m3 ha−1, and the minimum 15N loss of 18.6 kg ha−1 was found under spray irrigation with the quota of 140 m3 ha−1. The irrigation mode or quota had a significant (p < 0.01) effect on the fate of 15N, but the combination of irrigation mode and quota only had the significant (p < 0.05) effect on plant 15N.
Table 3 The balance of 15N-ureaa
Irrigation mode Irrigation quota (m3 ha−1) Total 15N (kg ha−1) Plant 15N (kg ha−1) Soil 15N (kg ha−1) 15N loss (kg ha−1)
a In the same column, means followed by the same letter (a, b, c, d) do not differ significantly at 0.05 level, according to Duncan's multiple range test. *, ** and ns indicate that the experimental treatment has a significant (at 0.05 level) effect, an extremely significant (at 0.01 level) effect and no significant effect, respectively on the indicator.
Spray 140 180 68.6 ± 3.11 b 92.8 ± 4.67 ab 18.6 ± 1.57 d
180 180 71.2 ± 0.94 b 85.5 ± 2.94 bc 23.3 ± 2.00 cd
220 180 73.4 ± 2.70 b 83.1 ± 4.45 bc 23.5 ± 1.76 cd
Drip 140 180 72.3 ± 4.05 b 84.4 ± 5.72 bc 23.2 ± 1.67 cd
180 180 86.0 ± 3.60 a 69.8 ± 6.71 d 24.3 ± 3.11 c
220 180 74.7 ± 1.96 b 80.1 ± 3.64 cd 25.2 ± 1.68 c
Flood 140 180 50.1 ± 2.41 d 97.3 ± 4.99 a 32.6 ± 2.58 b
180 180 54.4 ± 1.92 cd 90.4 ± 3.84 abc 35.2 ± 1.92 ab
220 180 58.0 ± 4.00 c 82.5 ± 6.78 bc 39.5 ± 2.78 a
Irrigation mode ns ** ** **
Irrigation quota ns ** ** **
Mode × quota ns * ns ns


The possible influencing factors for 15N loss

Due to the constant total applied 15N, the 15N loss was negatively correlated with soil residual 15N (p < 0.05) (Table 4), and the correlation coefficient reached −0.965 and −0.995 under spray and flood irrigation, respectively. Overall, the 15N loss was positively correlated with the mineral 15N content in 0–20 cm or 20–40 cm layer after irrigation, and the relationship was much significant (p < 0.01) and significant (p < 0.05) respectively under spray irrigation and flood irrigation. Under spray irrigation, there was a significant (p < 0.01) correlation between 15N loss and organic 15N content in both 0–20 cm and 20–40 cm layers, but this rule was not found under drip irrigation and flood irrigation.
Table 4 Correlation analysis between 15N loss and possible influencing factorsa
  15N loss Soil total residual 15N Mineral 15N (0–20 cm) Mineral 15N (20–40 cm) Organic 15N (0–20 cm) Organic 15N (20–40 cm)
a *Represent significant correlation at 0.05 level, and **represent much significant correlation at 0.01 level. 0–20 cm and 20–40 cm represent the soil layer. The 15N was resourced from 15N-labelled urea with an abundance of 19.6%.
Spray irrigation
15N loss 1 −0.965** 0.986** 0.962** 0.943** 0.940**
Soil total residual 15N   1 −0.967** −0.901** −0.989** −0.823**
Mineral 15N (0–20 cm)     1 0.932** 0.943** 0.899**
Mineral 15N (20–40 cm)       1 0.872** 0.957**
Organic 15N (0–20 cm)         1 0.801**
Organic 15N (20–40 cm)           1
[thin space (1/6-em)]
Drip irrigation
15N loss 1 −0.694* 0.424 0.754* 0.244 0.875**
Soil total residual 15N   1 −0.815** −0.936** −0.746* −0.631
Mineral 15N (0–20 cm)     1 0.843** 0.929** 0.259
Mineral 15N (20–40 cm)       1 0.765* 0.641
Organic 15N (0–20 cm)         1 0.026
Organic 15N (20–40 cm)           1
[thin space (1/6-em)]
Flood irrigation
15N loss 1 −0.995** 0.796* 0.768* 0.892** 0.261
Soil total residual 15N   1 −0.799** −0.791* −0.911** −0.199
Mineral 15N (0–20 cm)     1 0.769* 0.728* 0.310
Mineral 15N (20–40 cm)       1 0.872** 0.058
Organic 15N (0–20 cm)         1 0.310
Organic 15N (20–40 cm)           1


Discussion

N is the “life element” for plant and contributes most to crop yield.13 Urea contains a high N content of 46% with relatively stable property and low production cost, and is easy to be stored and transported.14,15 The behavior of urea in soil not only has similarities with other fertilizers, but also has some differences.16 Urea is a main solid N fertilizer that is widely used at present. In China's facility agriculture, urea is one of the main providers of N in the compound fertilizer. Applying urea has become the habit of Chinese farmers during agricultural production.15

Our study evaluated the effect of different irrigation modes on the fate of urea-15N. The significant effect from irrigation modes on plant 15N accumulation sourced from that the different modes enhanced the soil N metabolism and changed the plant absorption for water and 15N in various degrees.17 Under the same irrigation quota, the soil water moved laterally under flood irrigation and had invalid loss under spray irrigation, thus relatively, drip irrigation provided more water for crops which resulted in a higher 15N use efficiency. This result was similar to the early study by Du18 that the N use efficiency increased with more water supply in crop rhizosphere. Our result also verified the coupling effect between water and N by many previous studies.19,20

The higher mineral 15N content in both 0–20 cm and 20–40 cm soil layers after drip irrigation (Fig. 4) suggested that drip irrigation had a better effect on promoting mineralization of fertilizer N. Previous study have shown that the amount and the rate of soil N mineralization present a positive feedback with soil water content within a certain threshold.21 The lower soil moisture will restrict the growth of soil microorganisms and inhibit the N mineralization, while the higher soil moisture content enhances denitrification under anaerobic soil environment that causes a reduction on the rate of soil N mineralization.22–24 In dryland, N mineralization is positively correlated with the soil water content which above the hygroscopic water content but below the optimum water content, under such range, the N mineralization amount increases linearly with the increased soil water content.25 Therefore, concluding from previous studies and ours, it is inferred that drip irrigation creates the most suitable soil moisture conditions for urea-15N mineralization, compared to spray and flood irrigation ratio under the three irrigation quotas in this study.


image file: d0ra00002g-f4.tif
Fig. 4 Contents of mineral 15N in 0–20 cm (a) and 20–40 cm (b) soil layer, and organic 15N in 0–20 cm (c) and 20–40 cm (d) soil layer after one typical irrigation (The sampling date was July 5, the next day after irrigation in vigorous stage of tomato plant. Values are means ± standard deviation. Means followed by the same letter (a, b, c, d) do not differ significantly at 0.05 level, according to Duncan's multiple range test. The 15N was resourced from the 15N-labelled urea with an abundance of 19.6%).

After experiment, 38.8–54.0% of the urea-15N remained in the soil, which was lower than the previous result in the tobacco soil (72.1%) using 15N double-labeled NH4NO3 as fertilizer source,10 which likely due to that nitrate ions in the previous study are easier to enter into the soil layers below main root zone with irrigation water and are harder to be absorbed by crops, leading to a higher residue in soil. It is speculated that the loss of urea-15N in this study is more related to urea hydrolysis reaction, since only small amount of 15N was detected below 60 cm soil layer (Fig. 3). After being applied into the soil, the urea is hydrolyzed by the promotion of soil urease, this process produces NH4+ and the NH4+ transforms into NH3, which results in the loss of urea-15N.26,27 Under flood irrigation, the more 15N loss should be attributed to the lateral migration of 15N. The surface soil has a lower bulk density and a higher porosity compared to the middle soil, the water supply in a short duration under flood irrigation limits the downward movement of irrigation water and promotes horizontal movement of 15N. Therefore, the lower 15N detected in soil profile under flood irrigation leads to a higher calculated loss of 15N compared to that under drip and spray irrigation. Our study detected a urea-15N loss of 10.3–21.9%, which is similar to the early result of 25% including 15% ammonia volatilization, 9% leaching and 1% denitrification losses.28 However, we only considered the total loss of 15N calculating by total applied 15N and recovered 15N. The obvious pathways of total fertilizer N loss included NH3, N2 and N2O to atmosphere, drainage and runoff of mineral N, which should be considered in future research.

The positive correlation between 15N loss and soil mineral 15N (Table 4) is due to that the soil mineral 15N is easy to migrate and leach with the water and lost through ammonia volatilization. The presence of organic 15N reflects the capacity of mineralizable 15N, therefore there is also a positive correlation found between 15N loss and soil organic 15N, especially under spray irrigation. In addition, it should be noted that 220 m3 ha−1 quota under drip irrigation increased the soil 15N amount in 30, 40 and 50 cm soil layers (Fig. 3c), which will increase the risk of 15N loss through leakage from deep soils. In general, 15N loss under the spray irrigation in this study was the lowest, this confirms the study by Chen.29 Our result proves that different irrigation modes have different influences on the fate of urea-15N under the same irrigation quota, thus it is of great practical significance to select suitable irrigation mode according to the actual situation of production site. Moreover, when similar researches are conducted under field conditions, it should be noticed that the rainfall is an important indicator since it mainly influences the fate of fertilizer N via runoff and drainage. The crop water use under the different irrigation modes also needed to be further investigated since it was helpful to better understand the mechanism of crop 15N utilization.

Conclusion

Under different treatments, the plant 15N, soil 15N and 15N loss accounted for 27.9–47.8%, 38.8–54.0% and 10.3–21.9% of the total applied 15N, respectively. The amount of 15N absorbed by plants were significantly (p < 0.05) higher under drip and spray irrigation in comparison to flood irrigation with a same irrigation quota. Highest 15N use efficiency but lowest 15N residual was detected under 180 m3 ha−1 drip irrigation, indicating that the supply and demand of urea-15N was more synchronized under such irrigation. The 15N loss increased obviously with increased irrigation quota. Moreover, correlation analysis between 15N loss and the possible impact factors showed that the soil mineral 15N content after irrigation might be one important factor that influencing 15N loss. Among the three irrigation modes, the 15N loss caused by spray irrigation was the lowest (10.3–13.1%), when with the same irrigation quota. The irrigation modes have profound impacts on the fate of urea-15N. Irrigation could be used as regulation pathway of plant N absorption and agricultural N output.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare.

Acknowledgements

This work was financed by Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province (2016J05069), Young Talent Foundation of Horticultural College of Fujian Agriculture and Forest University (61201400705), Postdoctoral Funds of China (2018M630723), Open Funds from Engineering research center of Fujian University of Modern Facilities Agriculture (G2-KF1808) and Start-up funding from Institute of Water Conservancy Science of Nanjing (received by Jin Qiu).

References

  1. J. Luo and S. Li, Jieshui Guangai, 2003, 3, 11–13 Search PubMed.
  2. X. Ma, Jieshui Guangai, 1999, 2, 112–118 Search PubMed.
  3. P. I. Brooker, Math. Comput. Model., 2001, 33, 619–623 CrossRef.
  4. W. Qi, Z.-y. Zhang, C. Wang, Y. Chen and Z.-m. Zhang, Geoderma, 2020, 358, 113978 CrossRef.
  5. S. E. Allaire, S. Roulier and A. J. Cessna, J. Hydrol., 2009, 378, 179–204 CrossRef.
  6. S. A. Al-Kufaishi, J. W. Sands and M. N. Andersen, Precis. Agric., 2009, 10, 16–33 CrossRef.
  7. M. Hou, Q. Jin, X. Lu, J. Li, H. Zhong and Y. Gao, Front. Plant Sci., 2017, 8, 00666 CrossRef PubMed.
  8. K. Kim and D. Clay, Agron. J., 2008, 100, 551–556 CrossRef CAS.
  9. F. Zhang and Y. Liu, South-to-North Water Diversion and Water Science & Technology, 2018, 16, 176–183 Search PubMed.
  10. M. Hou, X. Shao, Q. Jin and X. Gao, Arch. Agron Soil Sci., 2017, 63, 74–83 CrossRef CAS.
  11. M. Chilundo, A. Joel, I. Wesström, R. Brito and I. Messing, Agric. Water Manag., 2018, 199, 120–137 CrossRef.
  12. M. Hou, R. Xu, Z. Lin, D. Xi, Y. Wang, J. Wen, S. a. Nie and F. Zhong, Soil Tillage Res., 2020, 198, 104531 CrossRef.
  13. M. Hou, D. Chen, X. Shao and Y. Zhai, Fresenius Environ. Bull., 2016, 25, 5542–5554 CAS.
  14. A. M. Davis, M. Tink, K. Rohde and J. E. Brodie, Agric. Ecosyst. Environ., 2016, 223, 190–196 CrossRef CAS.
  15. G. Li, B. Zhao, S. Dong, J. Zhang, P. Liu and W. Lu, Agric. Water Manag., 2020, 227, 105834 CrossRef.
  16. S. Saggar, J. Singh, D. L. Giltrap, M. Zaman, J. Luo, M. Rollo, D. G. Kim, G. Rys and T. J. v. der Weerden, Sci. Total Environ., 2013, 465, 136–146 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  17. J. Wang, W. Niu, Y. Li and W. Lv, Appl. Soil Ecol., 2018, 124, 240–251 CrossRef.
  18. Y.-d. Du, H.-x. Cao, S.-q. Liu, X.-b. Gu and Y.-x. Cao, J. Integr. Agric., 2017, 16, 1153–1161 CrossRef.
  19. Z. Dai, L. Fei, D. Huang, J. Zeng, L. Chen and Y. Cai, Agric. Water Manag., 2019, 213, 146–154 CrossRef.
  20. H. Hu, T. Ning, Z. Li, H. Han, Z. Zhang, S. Qin and Y. Zheng, Field Crop. Res., 2013, 142, 85–94 CrossRef.
  21. V. L. Jin, R. L. Haney, P. A. Fay and H. W. Polley, Soil Biol. Biochem., 2013, 58, 172–180 CrossRef CAS.
  22. M. Hou, F. Zhong, Q. Jin, E. Liu, J. Feng, T. Wang and Y. Gao, RSC Adv., 2017, 7, 34392–34400 RSC.
  23. M. Hou, Q. Jin, X. Wu, Y. Yao and Z. Zhang, Arch. Agron Soil Sci., 2017, 63, 1324–1335 CrossRef CAS.
  24. X. Zhang, North. Hortic., 2010, 15, 168–174 Search PubMed.
  25. L. Li, Plant Nutr. Fert. Sci., 2012, 18, 749–757 CAS.
  26. X.-Z. Wang, J.-G. Zhu, R. Gao, H. Yasukazu and K. Feng, Pedosphere, 2007, 17, 62–69 CrossRef CAS.
  27. P. Li, J. Lu, Y. Wang, S. Wang, S. Hussain, T. Ren, R. Cong and X. Li, Agric. Ecosyst. Environ., 2018, 251, 78–87 CrossRef CAS.
  28. C. Hu and Y. Chen, Resour. Sci., 2001, 223, 46–48 Search PubMed.
  29. C. Chen, J. Richard and S. John, Agric. Water Manag., 2002, 54, 159–171 CrossRef.

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Click here to see how this site uses Cookies. View our privacy policy here.